Family Farming Knowledge Platform

Leveraging institutional food procurement for linking small farmers to markets

Findings from WFP’s Purchase for Progress initiative and Brazil’s food procurement programmes

The objective of this publication is to provide insights on the policy and institutional reforms required for developing and implementing IFPPs, based on a cross-analysis of lessons from eight country case studies covering WFP’s P4P and Brazil’s PAA and PNAE. At the level of the enabling environment, evidence shows that for the successful integration of small rural actors into institutional food procurement value chains, systems require: first, national-level policies that place small rural vulnerable actors as central to agricultural modernization; second, a clear alignment between policy and legislation to institute rhetoric and institutional reform on procurement; and third, a cross-sectoral platform that establishes clear institutional roles and mandates, facilitating collaboration between interrelated programmes and institutions. However, the absence of a perfect enabling environment – which rarely exists – does not preclude countries from embarking on IFPPs. Rather, in an effort to facilitate programme implementation, IFPPs can act as motivating catalysts for the revision of policy and legal frameworks, with the overall impact that the integration of small and vulnerable actors into ongoing agricultural transformation processes is accelerated

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Publisher: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
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Author: Siobhan Kelly
Other authors: Luana F.J. Swensson
Organization: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
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Year: 2017
ISBN: 978-92-5-109864-6
Country/ies: Brazil
Geographical coverage: Latin America and the Caribbean
Type: Report
Full text available at: http://www.fao.org/3/a-i7636e.pdf
Content language: English
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