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Prospere Bemoans Insufficient Youth Involvement In Agriculture

At this week’s pre-cabinet briefing, Minister of Agriculture Alfred Prospere expressed concerns about the shortage of farm workers on the island.

According to the minister, local farmers report difficulties in securing enough labour to manage their daily operations—an issue he believes is worsened by the declining presence of young people in agriculture.

Sharing an interaction with a local farmer, Prospere said, “Farmers are saying they are not getting the labour support that once existed. There is a farmer in Soufriere with 30 acres of good agricultural land, but he may have to leave the sector because he needs about 20 workers and is only able to get three or four.”

The minister noted that while some young people have shown interest in the sector, a lack of long-term involvement may be contributing to the labour shortage.

“I don’t know what has happened to some of our young people, but they do not seem attracted to providing farm labour,” he added.

Prospere referenced the Youth in Agriculture program, aimed at engaging local youth in the farming industry, but he admitted the initiative has not been successful.

“We actually engaged a number of young people in the south, and if you drive down to see those massive greenhouses that were assigned to a few young people, they only stayed for about a year or two before abandoning the project. I think it is because their concern was financial support, but I do not think that was the case. We had an arrangement with a particular bank to provide the support, but [the young farmers] just eventually left, and now we are upgrading those greenhouses to lease to other farmers,” Prospere explained.

To address the labour shortage, the minister revealed that it has been suggested  that Saint Lucia import farm workers. However, he has reservations about this approach.

“ I know if that happens in Saint Lucia, there are political implications to be considered, the first thing that will be said is that the government of Saint Lucia is actually importing farm labour into Saint Lucia and it is creating further problems for the unemployed young men in the country,” he said.

While other countries, like Dominica, have turned to importing labour from places like Haiti, Prospere hopes Saint Lucia can avoid this. “I wish we would not have to go that way because we have so many young men who are available, who are unemployed, but they seem not to be interested,” he remarked.

Prospere believes introducing technological components to agriculture may attract more youth.

“There are a number of young people that, since I became the Minister of Agriculture, they are [showing] interest in agriculture… but I believe there is something that has to happen to get them [involved]—and I believe it’s new technology and innovation,” he said.

The minister’s long-term concern is the impact this shortage could have on the island’s food security.

“It is a concern for the government and should be a concern for every Saint Lucian because if we do not get young people in agriculture, the older folks who have been there for 40 and 50 years, they are on their way out. We are going to have a serious gap and it’s going to make more problems for us in terms of our food import bill and food security,” he warned.

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7 COMMENTS

  1. Everyone is going to high school; therefore, crisis on the farms.
    When you graduate from high school, you don’t want to work on a farm. Everyone does not belong in high school, yet we try to send everyone there and then complain about shortages of laborers on the farms.

  2. How much are agricultural workers paid? Are the youths supposed to prepare land by hand? Who is mentoring these youths? Agriculture is a tough job and success is not guaranteed. So one bad crop after 4 months of hard work, and those youths are gone. They will not be burned twice. What is encouraging youths to enter the agricultural sector? The Youth in Agriculture program was not well thought out and as a result, the program is a failure. Many youth are top cannabis farmers though, and can’t wait to get their cultivators license. These are the youths that are actually enthusiastic about work in agriculture. These youths will be the ones who will be producing our food in the future.

  3. Seriously? This guy is exactly why not everyone should be a minister. He’d be better off as a parliamentary secretary. His thinking is so outdated and he’s not really in tune with what’s progressive. While he has a point sometimes, he really needs to connect with the younger generation to see what they find appealing in agriculture. Telling young people to just hit the books and work on someone else’s farm instead of encouraging them to grow their own food isn’t the answer.

    And let’s be real, you can’t compare St. Lucia to Dominica. That place has a huge brain drain issue, tons of farmland, and only a third of our population.

  4. There are two main issues Mr Minister. One: your ministry and the government keep sending students to Taiwan to school to learn asian agricultural methods and when they return there no tools and equipment to use what they learned or all they want is office jobs. Secondly we need to invest more into technology and machinery because manual labour is a thing of the past despite our terain.

  5. Mr Minister, I too hv an issue. I applied for agricultural land avaliable by the government for over a year now and I hv not gotten a response. I don’t want hand out from the government, I only need the land which I’m willing to lease and pay for but I can’t get any reply from the government (invest stlucia) I think you should look into this aspect not only for me but for others who want to farm and don’t hv the land. Thanks

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