A type of rural Methuselah effect has some worried that farmers are aging, while young people have little interest in food production--but a recent survey shows that the trends might be shifting.
According
to the 2017 National Young Farmer Survey, America’s new generation of young farmers
expects to overcome major barriers to their success in agriculture--including
access to land, affordable health care, and mounting student loan debt; but according to some,
success will require deliberate policy change at all levels of government. The
survey was conducted by the National Young Farmers Coalition in
partnership with Dr. Kathleen Merrigan, Executive Director of Sustainability at
George Washington University and former U.S. Deputy Secretary of Agriculture.
Reactions to this report vary, but some note that the farming landscape is changing in key ways. According to this article, the new generation can’t hope to replace the numbers that farming is losing to age. But it is already contributing to the growth of the local-food movement and could help preserve the place of midsize farms in the rural landscape.
Moving Toward Agriculture: Personal Choice, School Projects, and International Development
This two-time Super Bowl champ decided the place for him is the family farm.
In St. Louis,
Missouri, a group of adolescents and young adults learns about economic
development, self-sustainability, and urban agriculture through the Sweet Potato Project.
The African Development
Bank—with the leadership of Akinwumi Adesina--launched the Youth Advisory Group to create 25 million jobs and benefit 50 million youth over the next 10 years
by equipping them with the right skills to get decent and meaningful jobs.
Note: Dr. Adesina won the 2017 World Food Prize and the 2010 Borlaug CAST Communication Award.
by dan gogerty (top pic from goodnet.org and bottom from afdb.org)
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