Africa in Global agricultural trade and food security: recent trends
Aboushady, Aboushady / Pierre Mamboundou / Chahir ZakiExterne Publikationen (2025)
in: Sunday Odjo / Fousseini Traore / Chahir Zaki (eds.), 2025 Africa Agriculture Trade Monitor, Kigali: AKADEMIYA2063, 8-51
DOI: https://doi.org/10.54067/9798991636919
Open access
Africa’s agricultural trade was largely shaped by the colonial division of the continent in the 19th century, when the agriculture of several African regions was transformed into monocrop, export-oriented sectors that catered to the growing European demand for food, luxury products such as chocolate, and manufacturing inputs such as rubber and cotton (Bjornlund et al. 2020; Akyeampong 2017). This shift occurred at the expense of the domestic agricultural diversity and intra-African trade complementarity that had long ensured food security, and continued even after African countries gained their independence. Several African governments pursued agricultural policies similar to those of colonial times and focused on the export of a few crops to generate sufficient revenue to fund their industrialization and development plans. Between 1966 and 1973, for instance, nearly one-half of sub-Saharan African governments depended on the export of a single commodity to secure 50 percent of their export revenues (Bjornlund
et al. 2020). This concentration had two negative repercussions on food security: (1) increased vulnerability to fluctuations in global commodity prices; and (2) decreased local and traditional food production, which threatened the availability of food for the growing African population [...].