TAMBACOUNDA, Senegal — On a blazing afternoon in Senegal, 33-year-old farmer Filly Mangassa heaved peanut plants onto a horse-drawn cart, sending clouds of dust swirling.
Ten years ago, he left his village for the capital, Dakar, dreaming of becoming a professor. But the high cost of living and lack of jobs put that dream out of reach.
“Particularly after COVID, companies weren’t hiring and prices were rising,” said Mr. Mangassa, who has a masters degree in criminology. “I thought: My father and my grandfather were farmers, so why not use that experience and go back to my hometown and try to make a living in agriculture.”
Across much of Africa, farming has long been seen as low-status work, pushing young people to cities in search of office jobs.
“For my father and some people in my family, they sort of saw me returning to the countryside as a step back,” Mr. Mangassa said.
But that perception is changing. Rising food prices, investments in irrigation and access to new technologies are making agriculture more profitable. Governments and nonprofits now fund programs that teach advanced farming skills and support farmers with equipment, fertilizers, pesticides and seeds.
“When my father saw that I had a clear, thorough business plan, he encouraged me and helped me with the administrative process to acquire land,” Mr. Mangassa said.
He is part of a trend of young Africans leaving cities to try their luck at farming. Mr. Mangassa says he makes a profit of around $3,500 a year, far above Senegal’s average yearly income of about $2,500.
Africa is the world’s fastest-urbanizing region, with cities growing at an average rate of 3.5% per year. As city populations increase, so does the cost of living.
Median rents and grocery prices in places like Dakar or Kenya’s capital of Nairobi are approaching those of major European cities, despite median salaries being significantly lower, according to the World Bank.
Meanwhile, between 10 and 12 million young Africans enter the job market each year while only about 3 million formal jobs are created, according to the African Development Bank.
“A lot of my friends who graduated at the same time as me now work as motorcycle taxi drivers and barely make a living,” Mr. Mangassa said.
Mr. Mangassa now owns a 32-acre farm where he grows peanuts, corn, vegetables and fruit. He received some funding to buy land from a World Food Program initiative helping young Africans start careers in agriculture.
Senegal, like many African countries, is plagued by food insecurity that has been exacerbated by donors’ funding cuts and worsening climate conditions.
The region also is recovering from the colonial era, said Ibrahima Hathie, an agricultural economist at the Senegal-based Prospective Agricultural and Rural Initiative think tank.
Scarce arable land and soil degradation further constrain food production.
But now, many young farmers are shifting to high-value crops and have better technology, so production is increasing, Hathie said, predicting that as more locally produced food enters markets, staple prices could fall.
Senegal is a main departure point for migrants attempting to reach Europe via the deadly Atlantic route. Authorities see agriculture as one way to create jobs to keep young people at home, launching campaigns in rural areas most affected by migration.
“I’m convinced that the only sector that can create the hundreds of thousands of jobs young people in Africa need is agriculture and livestock,” Senegal’s agriculture minister, Mabouba Diagne, told reporters in October.
Adama Sane, 24, once dreamed of reaching Europe but didn’t have money to pay smugglers. He had moved to Dakar in 2020 but struggled to make ends meet as a construction worker. Then he heard about the WFP initiative.
“In a sense, discovering agriculture saved my life,” Sane said. “If I had stayed in my construction job, I would have tried crossing the ocean sooner or later.”
He now raises poultry and cultivates peppers on his five-acre farm in his village.
“I am still far from where I want to be with my business, but at least I am saving a lot of money compared to the city, and life is less stressful,” Mr. Sane said. “A lot of young people think that being a farmer is a ‘small job,’ but there is starting to be a public awakening that agriculture can be the key to development in Senegal.”

Please read our comment policy before commenting.