Use our pull-down menus to find more stories
  


OR subscribers use AllAfrica's premium search engine


Click here to read or make comments on this topic »

Zimbabwe: Small Scale Farmers Seen As Backbone of Food Security


UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
 

Email This Page

Print This Page

Comment on this article

View comments

UN Integrated Regional Information Networks

15 May 2008
Posted to the web 15 May 2008

Harare

A crop forecast by the Zimbabwean government that this year's maize production will fall short of the national requirement by about one million metric tonnes is leading to a reassessment of the role of communal farmers in guaranteeing the country's food security.

For the past five years, Zimbabwe has become increasingly reliant on food aid, a situation largely attributed to the fast-track land reform programme, which redistributed more than 4,000 white-owned commercial farms to landless blacks.

Although the often chaotic and violent land redistribution in 2000, led by veterans of Zimbabwe's liberation war, is seen as the catalyst for the recession that has now lasted eight years and has taken annual inflation rates to above 160,000 percent - the highest in the world - white farmers were not the main producers of the country's staple foods.

After independence from Britain in 1980 price controls on maize increased the trend by white farmers to resort to cash crops like tobacco, paprika, cut flowers and cotton, while growing yellow maize for stock feed, leaving cereal production largely the preserve of communal farmers.

About 50 percent of Zimbabwe's land mass consists of communal farming areas, where 70 percent of the population reside and small-scale farmers work average plot sizes of about two hectares. Former white-owned farms make up about 25 percent of the land, while the remainder is state-owned, old resettlement and small scale commercial land.

Zimbabwe's annual maize requirement for human consumption is about 1.4 million mt, a drop of about 400,000mt in recent years, as it is thought that more than three million people, from a population of about 13 million, have migrated to neighbouring countries such as South Africa and Botswana, or further afield to England and Australia, in search of work. Unemployment in Zimbabwe is estimated at more than 80 percent.

Michael Jenrich, of the emergency unit of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) in Zimbabwe, told IRIN that "On average, communal areas have produced about two-thirds of Zimbabwe's maize production for the last 20 years," and small farmers were the backbone of the country's maize production.

"People think that communal lands are all dry and not good for agriculture. Two-thirds is fairly dry and suitable for livestock, but one-third of communal land is productive and could produce one million or probably even two million tonnes [of maize], if utilised and supported properly."

Disintegration of the system

Before the land redistribution programme a symbiotic relationship existed between many of the commercial farmers and communal farmers, but the agricultural landscape changed radically in 2000: commercial farmers had sustained large-scale agricultural industries, that meant communal farmers were indirect recipients of "a very sophisticated [agricultural] input system," Jenrich noted.

Because a large part of the fertiliser industry was used by commercial farmers, production was both big and reliable, and fertiliser was cheap, so even many communal farmers could buy and access it for a very reasonable price

"Communal farmers were benefiting from cheap and reliable seed supplies, fertiliser and transport systems that were all geared for a certain sector [large-scale farmers]. Because a large part of the fertiliser industry was used by commercial farmers, production was both big and reliable, and fertiliser was cheap, so even many communal farmers could buy and access it for a very reasonable price," he told IRIN.

The economic decline brought about the collapse of the fertiliser industry, disrupted the transport industry and saw a sharp decline in foreign currency earnings from the demise of export crops. This also had "a lot of indirect consequences for communal farmers that has impacted on their productivity," Jenrich said.

"If you see the yields of communal farmers - it is now a third of what it used to be 10 years ago. Communal yields were never very high - the average yields were about 1mt up to 1.5mt per hectare - but now they are below 0.5mt," he said.

A recent crop assessment of both communal and redistributed former white-owned farmland for the 2007/08 season by Zimbabwe's agricultural ministry estimated maize production at 470,669mt, or 0.27mt a hectare, and small grains production at 93,200mt, or 0.2mt a hectare.

The Zimbabwe Farmers Union (ZFU), which looks after the interests of communal land farmers, told IRIN that this season's poor harvest was a consequence of "the late delivery of whatever is available [seeds and fertiliser]" by government, the lack of access to credit for farmers, the increased number of farmers as a result of land reform, and climate change.

Relevant Links

E.V. Mandishona, the ZFU's training and information officer, said government agricultural extension services for communal farmers were under severe pressure, as "the number of farmers has increased, but the numbers of agricultural training officers have not."

Page 1 of 212

Read comments. Write your own.
Author: sudan_08

If at all our critiquing of Mugabe regime is genuinely meant to be tools to help in improving the welfare of Zimbawean people,then there is no need to be throwing stones at every issue that passes along the discussion pathway.

A case in point is the land issue and the gradual decline in output from the Zimbabwean agricultural fields. To suggest that the Fast track land reform is the sole cause is being mean with the truth. Yes it could have played its part,but there are a number of other factors which contributed including,among others; - The natural disasters... [Read Full Text]

Author: Shingifc

I think it is a misconception that the land reform did not result in the current disaster in food security in Zimbabwe. First there is the chronological relationship, secondly other current in the immediate vicinity of Zimbabwe(who share the same weather pattern) are producing good harvests. The land reform (or whatever it should be called) destroyed the supporting infracture supplied by large scale commercial farming, as described in the article.

I spent some time in Checheche and was impressed by the small scale production of cotton. I believe Zimbabwe should promote the small scale farmers by researching methods of increasing... [Read Full Text]


AllAfrica aggregates and indexes content from over 125 African news organizations, plus more than 200 other sources, who are responsible for their own reporting and views. Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica.

 
Share this on:
Facebook
Digg
Del.icio.us
StumbleUpon
Muti


Make allAfrica.com your home page | RSS Feed

Top | Site Guide | Who We Are | Advertising | Search | Subscribe

Questions or Comments? Contact us. Read our Privacy Statement.

HOME
allAfrica.com


Relevant Links




Famine Looms As Aid Workers Flee
Unicef Says 180,000 Children Are Malnourished
Investing in Cassava Research And Development Could Boost Yields And Industrial Uses
School Feeding Program is Too Expensive for Country
Country Spends $3 Billion On Rice, Wheat, Fish Importation Yearly





Today's Most Active Stories