shirikifarm.org

Shiriki Course Navigation

Financial skills · Course 7 of 8

Financial literacy for smallholder farmers

5 modules  ·  75 minutes  ·  All levels  ·  Free

Money is the most avoided topic in smallholder farming — and the most important. Many farmers who grow excellent produce and have loyal buyers still end their season with nothing to show because they do not manage their money as deliberately as they manage their crops. This course gives you the financial tools that make the difference between a farming activity and a sustainable farming business.

By the end of this course you will be able to

Distinguish between cash flow and profit — and understand why a profitable farm can still run out of money
Create a simple 12-month cash flow forecast for your farming enterprise
Understand the basics of agricultural credit — when to use it, what it costs, and how to access it responsibly
Identify and apply for the government grants and funding programmes available to smallholder indigenous crop producers in South Africa
Manage the seasonal nature of farming income — saving in good months to sustain lean months
Module 1 - Cash Flow vs Profit
1
Cash flow versus profit — the most important distinction in farming finance
16 min
Many farming businesses look profitable on paper but still struggle financially in real life.

The difference — illustrated

You plant sorghum in October. Costs are R800. You harvest later and sell for R1,500.

Quiz

Check your understanding

Module 1 · Quiz

1. A farm can be profitable but still run out of money because:
A) Wrong pricing
B) Timing mismatch between income and expenses
C) No buyers
D) Bad soil
2. Cash flow forecasting helps you:
A) Increase yield
B) Plan monthly financial gaps
C) Replace accounting
D) Avoid farming risks completely
3. Cash flow pressure is highest in:
A) Harvest season
B) Low production months
C) Planting season
D) Marketing season
Module 2 - Agricultural Credit
2
Agricultural credit — when to borrow, what it costs, how to access it
16 min
Credit is a tool in farming — it can accelerate growth when used correctly, or create debt pressure when used poorly. Understanding when to borrow is critical for smallholder success.

When credit makes sense

Credit works when you have a confirmed buyer, predictable income, and an investment that generates returns higher than the cost of borrowing.

It is also useful for assets like tunnels, irrigation systems, or compost infrastructure that increase long-term productivity.

When credit does NOT make sense

Borrowing to cover losses, without a buyer, or at high interest rates creates financial risk instead of growth.

Credit should fund growth — not survival. If it only covers past losses, it becomes dangerous debt.

Cost of agricultural credit in South Africa

Commercial banks charge around 12–18% interest. Land Bank offers 8–12%. NGOs and government programmes may offer blended or grant-based support depending on eligibility.

NEF and GDARD programmes also support small-scale producers with blended finance and input support.

Building credit history

Credit access depends on repayment history. Start small, repay consistently, and build trust over 12–24 months to unlock larger funding opportunities.

Reflection

What investment in your farm would generate enough return to justify borrowing at 10% interest?

Check your understanding

Module 2 · Quiz

1. Credit is most appropriate when:
A) Interest is low
B) You have a confirmed buyer and predictable revenue
C) Government offers it
D) You have no income
2. NEF blended finance includes:
A) Only loans
B) Grants and loans combined
C) Private investors only
D) Export subsidies
Module 3 - Government Grants and Funding
3
Government grants and funding for smallholder indigenous crop producers
16 min
There is significant public and development funding available for smallholder indigenous crop producers — the key challenge is knowing which programmes exist and how to access them.

GDARD smallholder support programmes

GDARD provides in-kind support such as seeds, seedlings, tools, and starter packs for registered smallholder farmers. These are accessed through extension officers or district offices.

A basic farm plan and registration (even a small CIPC business) is typically required.

DALRRD national programmes

CASP supports infrastructure, production inputs, and training. Ilima/Letsema supports smallholder inputs. PLAS supports land access for emerging farmers.

SEDA support

SEDA provides business development support, mentorship, and access to funding networks such as SEFA for small enterprises including agricultural producers.

GIZ and international programmes

GIZ supports agricultural development and climate resilience programmes, often through implementing partners. Shiriki networks can qualify through structured participation.

UNDP/GEF Small Grants Programme

Grants up to USD 50,000 are available for biodiversity, food security, and sustainable land management projects — including seed libraries and pilot farms.

Reflection

Which funding programme is most relevant to your situation, and what do you still need to prepare before applying?

Check your understanding

Module 3 · Quiz

1. GDARD support is accessed primarily through:
A) Online-only application portal
B) Extension officers with a farm plan
C) Private banks
D) Export agencies
2. UNDP/GEF Small Grants Programme focuses on:
A) Large commercial farms
B) Biodiversity and community food systems
C) Import-export trade
D) Industrial agriculture only
Module 4 - Pricing for Profit
4
Pricing for profit — a practical financial framework
14 min
Pricing is not guesswork — it is financial structure. Understanding how to calculate your true cost and required margins turns farming into a predictable business system.

The three-tier price analysis

Every crop should be evaluated using three pricing levels: break-even, sustainability, and growth price.

These levels determine whether a crop is viable, stable, or scalable in your farming system.

Break-even vs sustainability vs growth

Break-even covers only production costs. Sustainability includes household needs and reinvestment. Growth includes surplus for expansion.

3
Break-even keeps you alive. Sustainability keeps you stable. Growth builds your future.

Amadumbe example — real costing insight

A 20m² tunnel system shows that amadumbe is only marginal in community markets but highly profitable in specialty and value-added markets.

The same crop becomes unviable or highly profitable depending on the sales channel — not the crop itself.

What the analysis tells you

Pricing analysis is not academic — it tells you where to sell, what to grow, and whether to scale or redesign your system.

Reflection

Are you currently selling above break-even? Which pricing tier does your farming operation currently operate in — survival, stability, or growth?

Check your understanding

Module 4 · Quiz

1. The sustainability price is:
A) Break-even only
B) Break-even plus household and reinvestment margin
C) Export price
D) Random market price
2. Based on the amadumbe example, profitability depends most on:
A) Soil type
B) Sales channel selection
C) Seed variety only
D) Weather conditions
Module 5 - Planning for Growth
5
Planning for growth — investment, reinvestment, and the long-term farm
13 min
Financial planning in farming is not only about surviving the current season — it is about building a structured path toward the farm you want in the future.

The compounding effect of reinvestment

Every profitable season creates surplus. What you do with that surplus determines whether your farm grows or stays the same size.

Reinvesting even a small portion of profits into infrastructure can multiply future returns significantly.

Why reinvestment matters

Without reinvestment, farms remain static. With reinvestment, each season builds capacity, production, and income potential.

5x
Small reinvestments in infrastructure can generate multiple times their value in future production.

A five-year growth roadmap

A structured farming enterprise evolves through stages — from basic production to processing, partnerships, and expansion.

Each year builds on the previous one, adding new capacity, markets, and infrastructure.

Thinking long-term

Financial literacy in farming means planning beyond the season — thinking in years, not weeks.

Reflection

Where do you want your farming business to be in five years, and what is the first step needed this week to move toward that vision?

Check your understanding

Module 5 · Final Quiz

1. The compounding effect of reinvestment means:
A) Savings earn bank interest
B) Each investment generates returns that fund future growth
C) Costs decrease over time automatically
D) Government doubles farm income