Abstract
Malawi remains trapped in poverty and economic stagnation more than six decades after independence, despite numerous externally prescribed interventions. This paper argues that conventional development models have failed because they are disconnected from the indigenous knowledge systems that shape Malawian socioeconomic life. Drawing on the Chichewa adage Kulemera Ndikudya (wealth comes from food or food is the mother of lasting prosperity), this article proposes an alternative development framework rooted in Malawi’s epistemological traditions. The paper examines the trajectory from Malawi’s post-independence era of productive agro-industrial linkages (1964–1994) to the subsequent dismantling of these connections through policy shifts that prioritized imported models over local wisdom. Using a mixed-methods approach combining qualitative historical analysis with quantitative econometric modeling, including time-series analysis, Difference-in-Differences estimation, and household fixed-effects models, the study provides empirical support for its theoretical framework. Key findings reveal that the 1964–1994 period was associated with significantly higher agricultural productivity growth and stronger manufacturing-agriculture linkages compared to the post-1994 era. Recent evidence from Arias-Granada & Ricker-Gilbert (2025) confirms that private-sector distribution can improve input access efficiency, while Matchaya & Chilonda (2012) demonstrate that irrigation investments generate substantial food security gains, particularly for the most vulnerable households. The study identifies three operational pillars: (1) Community-led water infrastructure development, (2) Enabling farmer productivity through tax reform, and (3) Institutional revival of agricultural marketing corporations. While presenting a sequenced implementation framework, the paper contributes to decolonizing development economics and offers a blueprint for endogenous economic transformation in Malawi and similar African contexts.
Keywords:
- Keyword: Indigenous knowledge systems; development economics; food sovereignty; Malawi; agricultural transformation; Kulemera Ndikudya
How to Cite:
KASUNDA, J. G., (2026) “Exploring Kulemera Ndikudya: An Indigenous Knowledge-Based Development Model for Malawi”, Journal of Financial and Economic Dynamics (JFED) 1(2): 85, 34-50.