Recognising the value of fresh produce market agents to the industry
The market system in South Africa, within which agents function, can be credited for the fact that prices are discovered by the transparent interaction of supply and demand in a free relationship between producers, agents, and buyers that share the same goal of serving the consumer. This system enables large and small producers to have equal access to markets, whether domestic regional fresh produce markets, metropole fresh produce markets or the export markets.
Aggregators of market forces
The agents serve as efficient aggregators of market forces from the supply and demand side. Even a weak market signal of supply or demand can be translated into a price.
Farmers in South Africa are spared the frustration of producing products with weak or no demand and no prices as is happening in many parts of the world dominated by bilateral agreements or contract markets at wholesale or retail level. To the credit of the agency system of selling, continuity of supply of products in South Africa is enabled by the price signal which drives rational behaviour by producers, buyers and their customer reacting to the market forces.
This has enabled the South African farming sector to be competitive in world terms. This supply only gets disrupted by extreme and damaging weather, not the market.
A very competitive sales environment
Consumers can rely on the steady supply of products they need and that they are willing to pay for, enabled by the activities and diligent and interactive agents conveying the demand to producers. The number of Southern African neighbours active at the national fresh produce markets to procure fruit and vegetables for their countries is proof of the value created in terms of mass supply of product by the undistorted fresh produce market in South Africa.
It is, therefore, important for the industry to recognise that the very competitive sales environment in South Africa is enabled by the sales commission system.
The agency system of sales is definitely not under siege. The stress test put to the system of sales by fresh produce market agents might, in the end, be a blessing for the occupation in the sense that the debate can shed light on the value that it adds to our industry and society.