Bill Gates proposes accountability scorecards for agriculture development

Bill Gates, co-founder of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Jose Graziano da Silva, director general of the Food and Agriculture Organization. Photo by: Alessandra Benedetii / ©FAO

Bill Gates arrived Feb. 23 in Rome, Italy, armed with $200 million in pledges for global agriculture development projects and a challenge for the three U.N. agencies in the city to boost accountability in their field.

In a speech at the International Fund for Agricultural Development’s annual meeting, Gates urged IFAD, the World Food Program and the Food and Agriculture Organization to set a “global productivity target” for small farmers and develop a scorecard system that will measure the contributions of each member of the agriculture community to efforts to reduce global poverty.

“Scorecards will help each part of the system focus on its key contribution to the overall goal, diagnose problems as they arise, and spread the most effective interventions,” Gates said. “As it stands, we don’t really know what’s working and what isn’t.”

The scorecards will also help the communities identify good policies from the bad ones and allow the public to demand more accountability from their leaders, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation co-chair added. Gates pledged to support the development of the target and scorecards.

The rest of Gates’ speech was familiar, as he once again made the case for prioritizing efforts to bridge the gap between small farmers and innovative science and technology tools.

While in Rome, Gates also announced the following grants for agriculture development and research-related projects:

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