Dryland Development Pathways
The comment is frequently heard that “technologies are available,
what’s needed is to get them off the shelf and into use.” But will
the products really sell?
It is more than just a matter of pushing the goods off the shelf and
out the door. They need to be designed and deployed with a context
in mind, and in consultation with prospective users to meet their
needs.
Rather than viewing them as products on a shelf, we find it
important and useful to consider how they will enable and motivate
the poor to move along ‘development pathways’ that lead to
increasing prosperity, food security, equity and sustainability.
Where are we headed?
As human populations increase, a
number of different development pathways could unfold. People might
fight over increasingly scarce natural resources and not replace
those that are removed, spiraling downward into ever-greater
poverty. Or, they could invest in their lands, increasing their
production efficiency, incomes and total output, meeting the needs
of ever-larger populations.
Both scenarios have been observed in different situations. The
research-for-development community has a major role to play in
steering development towards the second type of pathway. Such
pathways need to have the following characteristics.
Enhance the natural resource base.
Unreliable rainfall and nutrient-poor
soils are hallmarks of the dry tropics.
Without addressing these issues,
sustained productivity gains are unlikely. For example, the impacts
of improved crop varieties have often fallen short of expectations
because these aspects were overlooked or assumed to be somebody
else’s problem’. A development pathways perspective compels us to
keep them in mind.
Consider the circumstances.
Possibilities will be greatly
influenced by enabling elements in the environment such as policy,
governance, infrastructure, services, institutions, education,
health care and others. A development pathways perspective considers
how prospective steps along the path will be influenced by these
elements. For example, if grain prices are kept artificially low by
cheap subsidized imports, and fertilizer prices high due to
transport and border costs, then high-input cereal cropping may not
be a practical step until such constraints can be overcome.
Increase
incomes.
Even the most effective interventions
will not have impact if they are not used. Profitable technologies
strongly motivate uptake by poor farmers, as long as the enabling
conditions are in place such as affordability, access, and know-how.
Profits enable farmers to invest in the next step in the development
pathway.
Connect to markets.
Markets are the source of the profits
that motivate progress along development pathways. Without growing
markets, the adoption of more productive practices simply creates
produce that cannot be sold at a remunerative price, leaving farmers
worse off than before. A development pathway perspective requires
that we carefully consider how the increased output of goods and
services will be translated into hard cash.

Manage risks.
Drought, and marketing uncertainty
(prices) are two main risks in the dry tropics. As they increase
their investments to respond to market opportunities, farmers may be
taking on more risk. A debilitating drought can wipe out years of
progress, pushing them back to square one on their development
pathway. A range of strategies have been devised to help manage
these risks, including diversification, water harvesting, weather
forecasting, crop insurance, inventory-credit associations, and
others (e.g. see previous ‘What ICRISAT Thinks’ on
drought and on
microdosing).
Diversify.
Diversification helps spread risk and increase incomes. A wide
range of crops can be grown in the sunny, moderate climates of the
dry tropics, if drought risk can be managed. Many of these are
highvalue crops with strong market potential. Diversification
thinking can go beyond crops and agriculture to include off-farm
enterprises that are less vulnerable to drought.
Innovate.
A degree of despondency often
accompanies development thinking about the dry tropics. Assumptions
that little can be done need to be challenged. Many of the richest
agricultural areas in the world are in dry areas (e.g. California,
France). Dryland farmers in the developing world continuously
innovate to capture new opportunities. A development pathway
perspective should for example consider how these areas might
progress towards irrigation development, which can fundamentally
transform what is possible.

Customize and adapt.
There is no single ‘one-size-fits-all’
development pathway to be handed out to the inhabitants of the dry
tropics. Conditions differ enormously. In some rangeland settings,
extensification makes more sense than intensification. If markets
cannot be accessed, the pathway needs to focus on food security and
self-sufficiency. Within-season, farmers need to adapt to changing
weather patterns and markets. Rather than prescriptive recipes or
technologies taken off the shelf, the research-for-development
community needs to provide prototypes, principles, and knowledge
that local communities can choose from, customize and adapt to local
trends and circumstances.
Steady and sustained.
Development pathways thinking can get us
away from the ‘quick-fix’ mentality that is better suited to
short-term project organization, than to long-term sustainable
development. Development pathways thinking recognizes that in order
to step into the future, one foot has to first be firmly grounded in
the present. Farmers are pragmatic; they will first test a new
intervention on a small part of their land, gradually expanding only
if and when it proves its mettle. This safeguards them against the
‘boom-andbust’ calamities that have too often resulted from
pressures for quick fixes.
A development pathway begins with a single step
Confucius famously said that ‘a journey
of a thousand miles begins with a single step’. Before taking that
step, though travelers need to know where they are headed, and what
they need to carry to reach their destination. We in the
research-for-development community can better assist them in this
planning by adopting a development pathways perspective.
We need to plan how one step forward will enable the next step, and
how the obstacles ahead will be cleared. We need to consider what is
necessary for a safe journey that reaches the desired destination of
sustainable prosperity and security.
Research-for-development institutions thus have key roles to play in
the march along dryland development pathways. As we walk alongside
the poor, we find ourselves inspired by their optimism, ingenuity
and adaptability.
Sincerely yours,

William D. Dar
Director General