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Can Burundi鈥檚 Coffee Industry Save the Country?

Explore Burundi's coffee industry and its importance to the its economy and the nation鈥檚 millions of coffee farmers.

Wild green grasses, bushes, and trees under partly cloudy sky

No country on earth faces the challenges Burundi does. The landlocked Central African nation, with a population of 10.5 million, suffers from an average per capita GDP of just US$808. Long torn by ongoing political upheaval and violence, Burundi鈥檚 challenges include corruption, poor infrastructure, limited access to health services and education, and widespread hunger. Its economy is heavily dependent on its agriculture sector, which accounts for half the country鈥檚 GDP. More than 90 percent of Burundi鈥檚 people depend on subsistence farming, and the average farm size is little more than an acre. Of the 156 countries ranked by the U.N.鈥檚 World Happiness Report, Burundi comes in last.

Taken together, it鈥檚 a sad state of affairs. A significant part of the struggle to relieve the poverty that plagues the country is focused on its single most important crop by far鈥攃offee. Can the many current efforts to support the Burundi coffee industry make a difference? And what are the economic risks inherent in depending so heavily on Burundi coffee?

 

The challenge

In 2017, Burundi exported about 14,000 metric tons of coffee. That鈥檚 a tiny drop in the bucket of the huge international coffee trade, but many Burundians depend on the coffee industry for their very survival. It provides a source of income for a large percentage of the country鈥檚 estimated 600,000 coffee farmers. And it accounts for anywhere between a third and two-thirds of the total value of the country鈥檚 exports, depending on the year.

Infographic titled Variable Yields

The ill effects of depending so heavily on just one crop are exacerbated by the unstable yield of Burundi鈥檚 coffee crop. The 2018 crop came in at less than half of the all-time high of almost 40,000 tons harvested in 1994. According to a United Nations , coffee production has fallen an average of 6.6 percent annually since 2001, which many blame on the 2010 privatization of the industry. And the country鈥檚 coffee production is highly volatile, varying from a low of 6.2 tons in 2006 to a high of 30,000 tons just one year later (see 鈥淰ariable Yields鈥). To make matters worse, the actual financial value of the annual crop depends largely on the highly volatile prices offered by local processors and on international coffee markets.

There are many causes of this instability鈥攁ll of them challenging. Varying weather conditions play a large role, of course, but so do the country鈥檚 aging coffee trees, long-term degradation of the soil, and inadequate supplies of fertilizers. Poor farming practices are exacerbated by a lack of extension services that would help farmers be more productive, while volatile prices force farmers to shift their efforts to different crops from year to year. Unsurprisingly, many have given up on coffee farming entirely. The country鈥檚 weak infrastructure severely limits the efficiency of its coffee supply chain. There are few means to support coffee farmers in improving their farming practices, and their lack of access to information on market prices for their crops makes for an even more volatile and asymmetrical market.

 

To the rescue

Still, there is hope. For one thing, Burundi grows great coffee. Properly washed and processed, it is frequently rated as one of the best coffees in the world. 鈥淏urundian coffee is finding its place,鈥 says Ben Carlson. 鈥淭he complex flavor profile distinguishes [it] from others in Africa, but the reason it has been hidden is it is hard to find and difficult to export.鈥 Carlson and his wife, Kristy, run the Long Miles Coffee Project there, where the two Americans have built a washing station and work with 4,500 small-scale growers to better control the quality of their coffee and boost the price they receive. As a result, their coffee is certified as 鈥渄irect trade鈥濃 a level of certification even more 鈥渄irect鈥 from the growers and roasters than fair-trade coffee.

Pile of coffee beans

The challenge, however, lies in producing more of that great coffee and getting fair prices for it locally and in international markets. Efforts like the Carlsons鈥 are a start, but many more like them are needed to benefit a sizeable chunk of Burundi鈥檚 coffee farmers and processors.

 

Coffee growers have gained greater control over the supply chain, reducing abuses on the part of middlemen like the many privately held washing stations and exporters.

 

On a local level, the rise of coffee cooperatives and of the National Confederation of Coffee Growers of Burundi (CNAC) has mitigated the adverse effects of the privatization of much of the industry鈥檚 infrastructure, a process that began in 2008. Coffee growers have gained greater control over the supply chain, reducing abuses by middlemen like the many privately held washing stations and exporters. The result has been more stable prices and improved farmer income. 

man picking coffee beans off the plant carrying basket full of coffee beans

International efforts have helped, too. The Global Coffee Platform (GCP), a consortium of coffee growers and producers hoping to boost and coordinate the sustainable production of coffee, recently issued a  analyzing the many needs of Burundi鈥檚 coffee sector. An investment of $43 million over 10 years in farmer training, coffee tree rejuvenation and agricultural inputs, the GCP argues, would reap $144 million in value for the industry, raising farmers鈥 incomes by 20 percent.

To that end, the World Bank has gotten involved, pumping $55 million into its Burundi Coffee Sector Competitiveness Support Project. Goals include increasing the productivity of the country鈥檚 coffee farms and the quality of the coffee; improving the country鈥檚 coffee infrastructure and supply chain; and improving access to markets. Begun in 2016, the initiative has boosted output from 15,000 tons to an estimated 18,000 tons in 2018.

 

Hope

The goal, according to Emmanuel Niyungeko, head of Burundi鈥檚 coffee regulatory authority, is to  to 22,000 tons of coffee in 2019, and to boost that to 30,000 tons in 2022. That鈥檚 an ambitious goal, perhaps, for an industry beset by so many challenges. A stronger coffee industry will by no means solve all of Burundi鈥檚 many problems.

It can even be argued that boosting coffee output may only make matters worse. The stronger the country鈥檚 coffee sector grows, the more reliant its entire economy will become on it. It鈥檚 an especially cruel twist on the concept of the 鈥,鈥 the 鈥減aradox of plenty鈥濃攃ountries dependent on a single resource, whether it鈥檚 Angola鈥檚 oil or Chile鈥檚 copper, have been shown to have higher levels of poverty and to develop more slowly than those with more diversified economies. Many countries in sub-Saharan Africa suffer this fate鈥擬alawi depends heavily on tobacco to boost its foreign currency reserves, for instance. Like Burundi, Malawi鈥檚 tobacco sector seems perpetually under the triple threat of unpredictable harvests, volatile prices and ongoing political instability.

The long-term solution for all countries cursed by dependence on a single resource is economic diversification. But for the time being, that鈥檚 a lot to ask of countries like Burundi. In the meantime, a stronger coffee industry that provides greater support and fairer prices to Burundi鈥檚 farmers would make a big difference to the millions of Burundians whose very livelihoods depend on it.

Carlson of the Long Miles Coffee Project puts it bluntly: 鈥淐offee must succeed for Burundi to succeed.鈥

 

Additional Links

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How Research Supports Kenyan Coffee

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The Singapore Paradox

Resolving the Dilemma of Rice Farming