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Malawi's Green Revolution
Secondary Title:
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: Seeking Sustainability 1998-2015
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Filmmaker Name:
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Charles Mann, Doug Karr, Michael J. Palmer
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Film Length:
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39 min
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Film Year:
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2005
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Duration:
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21-45 min
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Decade:
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2000s
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Series:
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Development Communications Workshop series
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Color:
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color
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Region:
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Africa
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Responding to recurrent food crises, scientists in Malawi had developed and field-tested new maize varieties and crop combinations that promised Malawi a "Green Revolution" by 1998. However, with farmers too poor to purchase seed and fertilizer, the question became: how can Malawi empower its farmers with this new technology?
The answer came in a dramatic response to a food crisis in 1998 when donors and the government distributed small Starter Packs of the new seed, fertilizer, and nitrogen fixing legumes to all smallholder farmers in Malawi — 2.8 million households. Production soared, and by the end of the second year of the program, Malawi had a large maize surplus.
However, after judging Starter Pack's annual $25 million cost unsustainable, donors changed the public policy from supplying the new technology to all farmers to only providing a basic social safety net: lower productivity seed and less fertilizer in each pack, and packs only for Malawi's neediest. This change placed Malawi's Green Revolution on hold, and production fell towards traditional levels. By 2005, Malawi again was in a desperate food crisis.
Over the objections of donors, the government responded to the crisis by providing vouchers to all farmers - allowing them to buy two bags of fertilizer and improved seed at a high discount. At a cost of about $70 million per year, the surge of improved seed and fertilizer restarted Malawi's stalled Green Revolution, and the country again moved into maize surplus. With the World Bank having judged this a "smart subsidy", perhaps this approach will prove sustainable - despite overlooking much of the science that motivated the original Starter Pack approach.
The film brings to life some central dilemmas of development policy as supporters and opponents of Starter Pack express their views, and as donors press to reshape the program from a focused instrument of technological change into a mild social safety net, then into something midway between.
To provide more background and deeper insight into the issues highlighted in the film, the DVD includes 57 clips selected from specialist interviews, organized into eleven themes. Each of these (or all) can be played as a unit, but the menu also permits going directly to any single clip, enhancing the usefulness of this extraordinary compilation of expertise.
“I REALLY like the Starter Pack film. It is thoughtful, balanced, picturesque, and is truly excellent in showing the reactions of various stakeholders. It's a gem.” —Walter Falcon, Prof. Emeritus, Stanford University and Former Chairman, CIMMYT
Films in the Development Communications Workshop series
SELECTED SCREENINGS & AWARDS
Official Selection, Woods Hole Film Festival, 2006
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