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World Food Programme,
Purchase for Progress

"Now that I have a secure buyer, I will grow a lot more beans,” says one farmer who is benefitting from WFP's innovative Purchase for Progress (P4P) programme.

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Most of the world’s half-billion smallholder farmers struggle to make food spring from the earth. Hit hardest by the rising tide of natural disasters—and often lacking access to the credit, fertilizers and improved seeds that would boost their resilience— they continually hover a half-step away from ruin.

And yet, whole continents depend on their labors. In sub-Saharan Africa, where some 80 million smallholder farmers (mostly women) supply 80 percent of the food, they are the future.

In 2008, the World Food Programme (WFP) bought $1.1 billion worth of food in 73 developing countries. That same year, we launched a 21-country pilot initiative called Purchase for Progress (P4P), which seeks to leverage our huge purchasing power to the advantage of the smalltime farmers in the poorest countries where we work.

The program, which receives funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates and Howard G. Buffett Foundations, aims to empower tens of thousands of small-scale farmers to move beyond subsistence— by connecting them to markets. The food WFP buys from the farmers will feed the hungry in the same country. A guaranteed buyer also gives farmers the confidence—and the cash—to invest in their own enterprises.

This formula has already proved a “win-win” for small farmers from Asia to Latin America.

In Nicaragua, we heard from 76-year-old farmer Dionisio Blandon, who can finally afford quality seeds and fertilizers for his 1.4 hectare plot of maize because his P4P-supported cooperative has extended credit—to be repaid after the harvest. He expects his income to increase by 40 percent.

Anne Rono, a mother of seven from Kenya, tells us she’s usually at the mercy of traders who take advantage of small farmers by offering them below-market price for their maize. But this year—thanks to P4P—she’s getting a reliable buyer and a fair price, putting more cash into her hands so she can purchase fertilizer for her fields—and school books and clothing for her kids. In her words: “P4P can change my life.”

Find out more about Purchase for Progress here.

WFP_FTC.gif"Fill the Cup" is an international campaign to raise funds for the estimated 59 million children in the developing world who go to school on an empty stomach. 

It takes just 25 US Dollar cents to fill one of the "Red Cups" that the World Food Programme uses to give hungry children a regular school meal of porridge, rice or beans. US$1.50 would feed a child for a week. Help us "Fill the Cup" by making an online donation now.  Donate here.   (See Video)

Working in Partnership in Mali

Afrique Verte, a Malian non-governmental organization that supports 30,000 farmers in marketing agricultural surpluses, is a key partner in P4P Mali. A variety of partners drawn from the government, UN agencies, NGOs, international organizations and donors provide the necessary expertise or complementary resources to ensure farmers get the support they need to benefit from agricultural markets.

P4P Breaks New Ground in Sierra Leone

The Koinadugu Women’s Vegetable Farmers’ Cooperative delivered the first consignment of rice ever purchased by WFP in Sierra Leone. Twenty five metric tons of locally produced rice was purchased through the Purchase for Progress (P4P) project to be distributed through the school meals programmes.

Food Aid Information System

Access the most reliable and comprehensive data on food aid flows. FAIS is a key source of information for anyone interested in global efforts to eradicate hunger and malnutrition.