Title: Institutional Reform of the Mozambican Agricultural Research System:
1Institutional Reform of the Mozambican
Agricultural Research System
- The running chameleon.
- Prepared by M. Harun R. Costa and W. Peterson
- FARA MEETING 2002
- 18th March 2002
- Maputo,
2I - INTRODUCTION
- What is happening in Mozambique regarding
National Council for Agricultural Research
- Participation of no public entities
(stakeholders).
3AGRICULTURE IN MOZAMBIQUE
- A. DATA AND GROWTH INDICATORS
- - Mozambique with an area of approximately
786.000 km2
- 80 of the population (of which 91 are women and
70 men),
- and generates - 80 of revenues from export.
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5AGRICULTURE IN MOZAMBIQUE
6AGRICULTURE IN MOZAMBIQUE
- Figure 2 Average Yield of the major Crops
7THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
8THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- Before independence
- two autonomous
- Mozambican Agronomic Research Institute 1965
- crop and animal husbandry and forestry,
- three regional research centres
9THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- A. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
- Mozambican Veterinary Research Institute 1966
- animal pests and diseases, and artificial
insemination.
10THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- After independence in 1975
- the autonomy was abolished
- National Agronomic Research Institute
- Directorate of Agriculture (DINA)
- National Veterinary Research Institute
- Directorate of Livestock (DINAP).
11THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- Artificial Insemination Centre (CEFRIA) 1981
- Animal Production Research Institute
- Directorate of Forestry and Wildlife (DNFFB)
(1985)
- Forestry Experimental Centre
12THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- B. AGRICULTURE RESEARCH SYSTEM SET UP
- The three formal public research institutes were
given legal identities
- INIA 1987
- INIVE 1987
- IPA 1988
- to operate as subordinate institutions of MADER
with administrative and financial autonomy.
13THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- B. AGRICULTURE RESEARCH SYSTEM SET UP
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15Table 2 List of research programs.
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18THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- C. RESOURCES AVAILABLE
- Human resources
- The human resource base is very weak and only a
few persons have research training (PhD degree, 6
out of 111 researchers (Figure 3)).
19THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- C. RESOURCES AVAILABLE
- Figure 3. Available staff in research
institutions under MADER, 2000
20THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- C. RESOURCES AVAILABLE
- Financial resources
21- Are heavily dependent on external support
22THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
23- Figure 4 Agricultural research funding (actual
expenditure) to INIA, IPA, INIVE and CEF in
1993-1999 period (Recurrent budget, investment
budget and projects).
24THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- D. MAJOR CONSTRAINTS
- Human resources
- Shortage of qualified management and scientific
staff in the system
- Opportunity cost for senior staff higher outside
the public sector
- Research staff concentrated in Maputo
- No continuity in management staff
25THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- D. MAJOR CONSTRAINTS
- Financial resources
- Governments low priority for research (low of
Agr GDP for research)
- Year-to-year fluctuations in resource allocation
- Cumbersome disbursement procedures
26THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- D. MAJOR CONSTRAINTS
- Infrastructure resources
- Poor country coverage and location of research
buildings infrastructure
- Under investment in research equipment
27THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- D. MAJOR CONSTRAINTS
- Research management
- Poor organisational management procedures
(planning, implementation, monitoring and
evaluation, impact assessment, accountability and
transparency problems) - Weak research planning and priority setting
- Weak researcher time management (mainly in
Maputo)
- Poor communication and co-ordination between
research programmes
- Poor research result dissemination and publication
28THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- D. MAJOR CONSTRAINTS
- Research planning and stakeholder participation
- Poor priority setting procedures (Central Maputo
planning)
- Knowledge gap between farmers and researchers
knowledge
- No forums for effective stakeholder participation
29THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- D. MAJOR CONSTRAINTS
- Donor communication and coordination
- Research agenda dominated by different projects
and less attention to government objectives and
institutional development
- Poor donor confidence in public research system
- Lack of awareness of research results and problems
30THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- D. MAJOR CONSTRAINTS
- Government policies
- Restructuring proposals have not been
implemented
- Stakeholder control over public resources not
accepted
- Research council politicised
31THE AGRICULTURE RESEARCH IN MOZAMBIQUE
- E. MAJOR RESULTS
- Research recommendations
32- documents
- extension booklets and leaflets).
- Some adoption studies
33THE INSTITUTIONAL REFORM PROCESS IN THE CONTEXT
OF PROAGRI
34- A. WHERE WE ARE COMING FROM
- The institutes have been characterized by
- weak communications between farmer and research,
- centralized decision making and planning,
- insufficient stations for country coverage,
- lack of coordination between the institutes,
- heavy constraints due to insufficient
investments,
- and lack of producer/stakeholder participation in
decision making.
35THE INSTITUTIONAL REFORM PROCESS IN THE CONTEXT
OF PROAGRI
- B. WHERE WE NOW ARE
- In a phase of transition toward a more effective
and responsive system.
- Establishment of the research governing council
(CTIA),
- some improvements in communications between
stakeholders and the institutes have occurred in
the last 3 years.
- Decisions have been taken in the last year to
re-structure, re-organize
- and decentralize research to four Agro-ecological
Zonal Centers.
36THE INSTITUTIONAL REFORM PROCESS IN THE CONTEXT
OF PROAGRI
37- Design of good governance entities/mechanisms
which allow
- the effective participation of the stakeholders,
building partnerships for research and technology
flow,
- decentralization of the research agenda to the
agro-ecological zonal centers
- and providing more adequate and stable funding.
38THE INSTITUTIONAL REFORM PROCESS IN THE CONTEXT
OF PROAGRI
- C. WHERE WE ARE HEADING
- The major goal of the institutional reform is
- to rationalize the scarce resources for research
- and build an effective and efficient NARS which
is responsive to clients needs and play a role in
poverty reduction.
39THE INSTITUTIONAL REFORM PROCESS IN THE CONTEXT
OF PROAGRI
- D. THE RUNNING CHAMELEON
- the slow motion steps
- toward establishing the new organization of the
NARS.
- large investments to strength some research
institutes with little impact on performance of
the institutes
40THE INSTITUTIONAL REFORM PROCESS IN THE CONTEXT
OF PROAGRI
- D. THE RUNNING CHAMELEON
- There is a perception that
- The reform process for the agricultural research
system is not moving due to resistance to change
- and lack of political commitment.
41THE INSTITUTIONAL REFORM PROCESS IN THE CONTEXT
OF PROAGRI
- D. THE RUNNING CHAMELEON
- four activities were considered crucial for
beginning the process of strengthening the
agricultural research system
- Strengthen the role of existing CTIA
- Start a feasibility study
- Establishment of programs at selected
agro-ecological Zonal Research Center and
- Establishment of a Competitive Agriculture
Research Fund.
- a speed of a running chameleon.
42THE INSTITUTIONAL REFORM PROCESS IN THE CONTEXT
OF PROAGRI
- E. THE NEW OPTION FOR ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE
- Challenging issues
- genuine autonomy
- good governance, without causing major disruption
for the research institutes ongoing activities.
- The proposal of statutes and other legal
documents
- endorsement and approval by the policy makers.
43THE INSTITUTIONAL REFORM PROCESS IN THE CONTEXT
OF PROAGRI
- E. THE NEW OPTION FOR ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE
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45SUSTAINABILITY OF THE PROCESS OF INSTITUTIONAL
REFORM
- A. AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH IN A CHANGING CONTEXT
- external environment.
- trade liberalization, market globalization and
increased competition
46SUSTAINABILITY OF THE PROCESS OF INSTITUTIONAL
REFORM
- B. OWNERSHIP OF THE CHANGE PROCESS
- Sustainability of the changes
- is greatly dependent on ownership by
- the stakeholders (the institutes, donors and
partners in research and development).
- decisions must be owned in this sense by national
staff as well as partners,
47SUSTAINABILITY OF THE PROCESS OF INSTITUTIONAL
REFORM
- AGREED POLICIES AND DECISION MAKING
- decisions concerning the institutional reform of
the agricultural research system are within the
PROAGRI framework
- Research priorities focused on adaptive and
applied research in a farming systems context
48SUSTAINABILITY OF THE PROCESS OF INSTITUTIONAL
REFORM
- AGREED POLICIES AND DECISION MAKING
- Stakeholders representation at National
Agricultural Research Council and Zonal Research
Council level
- Linking research, extension and training
- Financing of research through a plurality of
sources
- Provision of research through a plurality of
institutions public and private.
49SUSTAINABILITY OF THE PROCESS OF INSTITUTIONAL
REFORM
- RESOURCES AND PLANNING
- the PROAGRI common funding mechanism
- has shown to be below standards
- The research managers are overwhelmed with
planning and with funding related issues
50KEY PRACTICAL REFORM ISSUES AND CONCLUSION
- A. EXPERIENCES WITH REFORM
- it is important to plan the steps and know the
roles of the key players
- (policy makers,
- research community
- and stakeholders in the process of change.
51KEY PRACTICAL REFORM ISSUES AND CONCLUSION
- B. VISION FOR RESEARCH
- demand driven agricultural technologies that
enables the intensification of agricultural
production of the poor resource farmers.
52KEY PRACTICAL REFORM ISSUES AND CONCLUSION
- C . RESEARCH/TECHNOLOGY ADVOCACY AND SUPPORT
- advocacy for science and research.
- to support the research system on many fronts,
including
53KEY PRACTICAL REFORM ISSUES AND CONCLUSION
- C . RESEARCH/TECHNOLOGY ADVOCACY AND SUPPORT
- Weaknesses and inadequacies that needs government
attention and decisions
- Reduced numbers of qualified scientific
management staff
- Research career development, adequate salary and
incentives, promotion, and human resource
relocation policy
- Funding policy of research in general and
agricultural research in particular.
- Training of scientific staff policy.
54KEY PRACTICAL REFORM ISSUES AND CONCLUSION
- C . RESEARCH/TECHNOLOGY ADVOCACY AND SUPPORT
- Guide and not be guided on research funding
allocation and coordination
- Improve quality and capability of Extension
services (demand driven services schemes of
outsourcing, and contracting )
- Definition on the balance between attention to
resource poor producers and commercial high input
producers as a mean to define national research
priorities and government budget.
55KEY PRACTICAL REFORM ISSUES AND CONCLUSION
- C . RESEARCH/TECHNOLOGY ADVOCACY AND SUPPORT
- Weaknesses that need institutional attention
- Poor organizational management procedures
- Lack of institutional planning development
- Weak definition of prioritization in project
portfolio
- Non accountability, monitoring and evaluation
practices
56KEY PRACTICAL REFORM ISSUES AND CONCLUSION
- C . RESEARCH/TECHNOLOGY ADVOCACY AND SUPPORT
- Lack of research integration (planning,
communication, collaboration within and between
Programs, Departments and institutes )
- Donor program/project dependency
- Weak/ non consistent client demand driven
- Low integration with Extension service and other
NGOs partners.