Food safety, trade, standards and the integration of smallholders into value chains: A review of the literature
2017
Files
Полное описание
ЗаглавиеFood safety, trade, standards and the integration of smallholders into value chains: A review of the literature
ДоступEnglish: 9fea599a-e312-4907-be97-2c6ff45aa1a0 - PDF ;
Резюме
Current transformations in food consumption and food trade have allowed greatly
increased food exports from developing countries and also shifted the composition of
exports towards high-value foods that offer better opportunities for smallholder farmers to
improve their livelihoods. Transformations in the domestic markets of developing countries
are also changing the composition of food consumed and opening up opportunities there.
Nevertheless, food safety crises and changing food safety requirements are widely considered
as potentially limiting the opportunities for smallholder farmers to enter these expanding
markets. In particular, a shift in food safety philosophy towards the introduction of risk-based
preventive controls on farms appears to pose a threat to smallholder farmers by creating
new requirements for knowledge about food safety, additional investment in equipment
and food safety systems, and more intensive linkages between producers and the buyers of
their products.
Food safety challenges vary considerably across markets and across products. Markets –
developed country export markets, regional markets and developing country domestic markets
– are changing rapidly and present different opportunities and threats from food safety risks
and also the controls introduced to contain them. The food products for which food safety
challenges are most prominent are cereals and nuts susceptible to aflatoxin contamination,
and high-value fresh products such as fresh fruit and vegetables, meat and dairy. The use
of risk-based preventive controls to address challenges is being extended not only through
the extension of border controls, but also through private standards and through domestic
controls in developing countries and food importing countries. Increasingly, the pressure is
for the food safety systems of exporting countries to demonstrate their capacities to offer levels
of food safety protection equivalent to those achieved in destination markets.
Responding to these food safety challenges involves developing country governments
making strategic choices about establishing a range of domestic standards and facilitating the
upgrading of capabilities by smallholder farmers and their inclusion into a range of different
markets. With respect to enabling smallholder farmers to gain knowledge about new food
safety requirements, invest in food safety systems and increase the confidence of buyers, the
well-established mechanisms for supporting smallholder inclusion in markets can make a
substantial contribution to limiting exclusion.
АвторыHumphrey, J.
Серии
ДатаRome, Italy: IFAD, 2017
Описание
72 pp.
ISBN / ISSN
9789290727385
ФондыТип ресурса > Документы и публикации > Публикации