Uganda's agricultural sector, which relies predominantly on smallholder farmers, grapples with multifaceted challenges that severely impede its growth and the economic well-being of farmers. Despite its critical role, contributing approximately 24% to the national GDP and employing over 70% of the population (according to official Ugandan data), the sector faces severe bottlenecks.
These challenges include dilapidated rural infrastructure, which leads to prohibitive transportation costs and substantial post-harvest losses due to inadequate storage and limited processing facilities. Farmers also suffer from a critical lack of access to timely and accurate market information, weak linkages to reliable buyers, and insufficient access to quality inputs like certified seeds, fertilizers, and appropriate financing.
These systemic deficiencies lead to low productivity, poor produce quality, limited value addition, and an inability for farmers to effectively participate in and benefit from dynamic, lucrative markets. Consequently, smallholder farmers are often trapped in a vicious cycle of poverty and unable to realize fair prices for their produce or invest in sustainable agricultural practices.
To respond to these challenges, the Government of Netherlands’ Ministry of Foreign Affairs under the Dutch Development Policy, designed and funded the 'Resilient Efficient Agribusiness Chains (REACH) Project', i.e., REACH-Uganda. This project strategically intervened to tackle these pervasive market system failures and enhance support services within crucial value chains such as rice and potato, to foster resilience and efficiency.
The REACH Project was strategically designed to catalyze a significant transformation within Uganda's rice and potato value chains, targeting 40,000 farmers and businesses to enhance market linkages and agricultural support services. Its core mission was to address the systemic failures that plagued these sectors, including inadequate infrastructure, limited access to crucial inputs and financial services, and weak connections to viable markets. The project's main goal was to foster a resilient and efficient agribusiness environment by strengthening local market infrastructures and simplifying the procurement of essential resources, ultimately aiming to boost farmer incomes and agricultural productivity.
As a subcontractor to IFDC, DT Global led the market systems development component of the project which involved co-designing and managing sustainable, interventions that strengthen value chain functions.
REACH-Uganda Project, among other outcomes, had the following farmers’ life-changing benefits: