Rome, 22 February 2022 – The UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) launched the Innovatech project today, which aims to develop agricultural (AgriTech) and financial (FinTech) digital solutions to facilitate small famers’ access to markets and to financial and non-financial services in Bolivia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras and Mexico. The German Sparkassenstiftung for Internationale Cooperation, an institution specialized in promoting local finance systems in developing countries, will implement the project, which is expected to directly benefit 9,000 rural households.
“The COVID-19 pandemic has created a new world. Economies have gone digital and global and local food systems are following suit. It’s time for small-scale farmers to have access to the new services and tools that can connect them better to this new economic environment. Only in that way can they go beyond subsistence production to become prosperous entrepreneurs, able to ensure the livelihoods of their families and communities,” said Rossana Polastri, IFAD’s regional director for Latin America and the Caribbean.
“The IFAD-funded Innovatech Project will offer a great opportunity for growth, development and innovation in the six countries where it takes place. I’m very pleased that the German Sparkassenstiftung is able to contribute to this process by bringing to the table its years of expertise and lessons learnt in the field of digital financial services and rural development,” said Niclaus Bergman, the organization’s CEO.
In Latin America, the COVID-19 pandemic has had a strong impact on small-scale farmers and their organizations. They have experienced many challenges, including complications in acquiring the resources and raw materials needed for food production, limited transport and marketing, and more difficult access to financial services and technical assistance.
At the same time, AgriTech and FinTech companies have grown rapidly in the region and the potential for solutions they can offer is high on the agenda of many policymakers. Despite the increasing number of these companies, the services they offer to smallholder farmers remains limited, as most of them primarily target urban-based medium or large clients.
The challenge to improve linkages between smallholder farmers and FinTech and AgriTech companies is considerable. However, it is particularly important to do so to help smallholders overcome the unprecedented challenges caused by COVID 19. Doing so will facilitate farmers’ demands for new services and technical solutions tailored to their needs, helping them to build back better and to strengthen their resilience to future crises.
Most of the technology companies are willing to improve and expand their services to serve small farmers. However, still in their early stages of business development and with limited financial and human resources, the high cost of reaching clients in rural areas makes it prohibitive to do on their own. Investment in the Agri- and FinTech sectors is needed to strengthen their capacities to supply digital services and technological solutions to IFAD’s target group.
Innovatech will select twelve already-existing companies that are suitable and willing to adapt their digital services to the needs of smallholder farmers. In collaboration with IFAD’s operational and technical assistance staff, the companies will adapt, thoroughly test and put in place solutions that match the needs and capacities of end users (farmers’ cooperatives, producers’ organizations, small and medium rural enterprises) to connect smallholder farmers to markets, services and financing.
Broader access to these financial and non-financial services will benefit more than 260 small producers’ organizations through enhanced productivity, commercialization and financial sustainability. These 260 organizations already participate in IFAD-funded projects in Bolivia (Procamélicos and ACCESOS Rural), El Salvador (Rural Adelante), Guatemala (Guateinnova), Haiti (PITAG and Purraco), Honduras (Prolenca and Proinorte) and Mexico (Proecosocial).
By working in partnership with various value chain stakeholders, such as value-adding SMEs, and local providers of complementary services, it is expected that 36,000 households will ultimately benefit from better access to the digital financial and non-financial services by the end of the project implementation period, including most vulnerable groups such as indigenous people, rural women and youth. With an emphasis on gender equity and equality in all components and activities of the project, at least 50 per cent of participants will be women.
IFAD and German Sparkassenstiftung launched the Innovatech project today with a virtual event to promote interest among representatives of digital companies and producers’ organizations to get them involved in and benefit from the project.
The project is funded with a US$ 3.5 million grant from IFAD’s Rural Poor Stimulus Facility, which was set up after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic to boost the resilience of poor rural people affected by the crisis. Through the adoption of innovative technologies for agricultural management, flexible financial products and the reach to broader markets, smallholder farmers will be able to strengthen their resilience to commercial shocks, to climate risks and to economic distress.
The initiative is in line with the COVID policy responses and priorities of the six targeted countries’ governments, as well as IFAD’s LAC Division focus on the 3R approach to implement practical solutions leading to recovery, reactivation, and resilience.
Press release No.: IFAD/05/2022
IFAD invests in rural people, empowering them to reduce poverty, increase food security, improve nutrition and strengthen resilience. Since 1978, we have provided US$23.2 billion in grants and low-interest loans to projects that have reached an estimated 518 million people. IFAD is an international financial institution and a United Nations specialized agency based in Rome – the United Nations food and agriculture hub.
A wide range of photographs of IFAD’s work in rural communities are available for download from its Image Bank.