|
N° 10 - April 2003 Agricultural Resources Management Project in the Governorates of Karak and Tafila (ARMP) Water is extremely scarce in Jordan and is being exploited at 150 percent of sustainable levels. The project area is situated in the environmentally-fragile semi-arid southern highlands of Jordan. The Karak and Tafila governorates received far less investment in the mid-nineties than the northern areas: households there are reportedly amongst the poorest in Jordan. IFAD thus set out to improve natural resource management by arresting soil degradation and restoring fertility through the sustainable use of land and water resources. Improving the production potential of natural resources would help farmers to diversify and boost their incomes. Credit for poor households was also included in the project to help provide alternative sources of income through rural microenterprise. Key recommendations arising from the evaluation include:
Soil and water conservation
Credit, but on whose terms? The Agricultural Credit Corporation (ACC) is the only source of formal credit for farmers. Government-owned, the ACC is, however, now being formed into a bank. Its lending terms are stringent and do not always tie in with the poverty alleviation objectives of the ARMP. Given that a guarantor is essential, that loan repayments are deducted from salaries, and that physical access to the ACC can be difficult, women especially can face difficulties in taking out loans. Borrowers are further penalised where loan amounts are higher than necessary, a mechanism sometimes used to increase credit disbursement. Limiting loan amounts to the outlay required and relating repayment periods to net cash flow, including necessary grace periods, would allow the ACC to take on more borrowers with the available funds. A family income ceiling for credit eligibility would help identify those who need credit the most. Training and technical support concerning markets, investment, packaging, storage, processing, and sales strategies would help boost returns on loans. Eligibility criteria, other than minimum land holdings, are needed to reach the poorest mostly female-headed households. Poor people in the project area can be excluded from access to credit and conservation programmes because they do not have enough or any land and have no regular salary. Jordans asset-less rural women, in particular, need small loans and alternative collateral requirements to finance income-generating activities. Community participation A systematic, integrated approach to community participation throughout the project is vital to enhance sustainability. Under the SWC Programme, community participation would help broadcast information more widely and would ensure that the project reaches the poorest people. For the womens programmes, participation would put management of the small businesses on a more professional footing and create opportunities for economies of scale in production and marketing. The slow start of community participation during the projects first four years meant that those involved in the project were not as active as they might have been in the development process. For a truly participatory approach to be effective, commitment from the Ministry of Agriculture and its staff, extra funds for technical assistance and training for all project and ministry staff, as well as a clear policy statement on participation including operational guidelines and instructions for its implementation are all essential.
The fieldwork for this mid-term evaluation was completed in October 2000 and does not cover progress made since then. The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, Agricultural Resource Management Project in the Governorates of Karak and Tafila Mid-term Evaluation, Report N° 1159, June 2001, available from: Office of Evaluation, International Fund for Agricultural Development, Via Paolo Di Dono, 44, 00142 Rome, Italy. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||




A
major aim of the ARMP is to limit environmental degradation though the
SWC Programme by building stone walls and terraces to check erosion and
water run-off on farms. There is a high demand by farmers for involvement
in the SWC and by mid-term, three quarters of the farmers originally targeted
had participated and have indicated a four to five-fold increase in land
values following SWC measures. Around 1 170 cisterns, which collect rainfall
and irrigate by gravity, had been built on farms in project areas, saving
farmers the cost of buying water and allowing them to plant trees, mostly
olives. Good progress has also been made rehabilitating springs providing
water for domestic and livestock use. The improvements will strengthen
farming systems overall and ensure greater long-term water availability;
indeed the mid-term evaluation concluded that future prospects for sustainability
looked high.