http://www.mg.co.za/printformat/single/2010-05-20-time-to-ditch-the-disaster-scenarios
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BEN COUSINS: COMMENT - May 21 2010 06:00

The dominant view of land reform in Zimbabwe is that farm invasions from
2000 to 2001 were nothing but a corrupt land grab by Zanu-PF and its
cronies. This is said to have initiated a calamitous decline in agriculture
from which it has never recovered.

The story is that Zimbabwe moved from being the breadbasket of the region to
being a basket case, dependent on humanitarian aid to feed its people. The
media endlessly reproduces the image that commercial farming has completely
collapsed, conjuring up images of empty farms and a ravaged landscape.

This stereotype of Zimbabwean land reform is profoundly unhelpful. It is not
based on empirical evidence of the impact of land reform, or an
understanding of underlying complexities and trends over time. Seeing land
reform as a total failure clouds understanding of complex new realities that
farmers, government officials, political parties and other players are
grappling with in trying to chart a way forward.

The findings of a three-year study in Masvingo province will be published in
a book later this year (see www.lalr.org.za). The study collected survey
data on 400 households on redistributed land, from four sites in the
province with contrasting agro-ecological potential. Farmers were engaged in
different types of cropping and livestock production, including cotton,
grains, oilseeds, sugar cane, cattle, goats and sheep. The sample included
medium-size farms (the A2 model) as well as smallholder farms (the A1 model)
in either villages or on self-contained units.

The study finds that crop yields and output on the redistributed farms, and
particularly on the A1 schemes, have increased steadily in the past few
years. From 2006 onwards more than two-thirds of households have produced
more maize than they can consume, whenever rainfall is sufficient. Cotton
production has been a notable success in one of the sites, helped by
processing companies providing inputs and a reliable market. Livestock
populations in most sites have increased steadily over time.

Many of the new "settlers" are adamant that their livelihoods have improved
considerably after land reform, despite four droughts over the past decade.
In Masvingo former beef ranches or wildlife farms are now supporting much
higher rural populations than they did before redistribution.

National crop-production data compiled by the United Nation's Food and
Agricultural Organisation clearly demonstrate the misleading nature of
images of "collapse". Trends vary considerably by crop type, showing
significant decreases in yields and total output for maize, tobacco and
wheat, but increases in area planted and total output for smallholder crops
such as small grains, groundnuts and dry beans. Cotton production, dominated
by smallholders since the mid-1980s, has seen increases in area planted,
yields and total output compared with the 1990s. Export crops such as tea,
coffee and sugar have seen significant decreases, but not their total
collapse.

Maize, the national food staple, has been badly affected by declining
fertiliser production and the disruption of seed production. These problems
were compounded by ineffective (and sometimes corrupt) government programmes
to supply inputs to land-reform beneficiaries. Maize is also sensitive to
rainfall patterns.

Compared with the 1990s national average of 1,6-million tons, the past nine
years have seen shortfalls of between 1,1% (in 2004-05) and 65% (in
2007-08), with the harvest in the good rainfall year of 2008-09 amounting to
1,2-million tons (25% less than the 1990s average).

Clearly, agriculture in Zimbabwe has indeed experienced significant problems
in the years following radical land reform, but the notion of "total
failure" is inaccurate. A new agrarian structure has come into being, with a
much wider range of farm sizes and farming systems than in the past,
replacing a highly unequal and dualistic structure.

Novel commodity chains for crops and livestock are emerging, with new
agribusinesses supplying inputs and buying produce, as in the tobacco
sector. Seed and fertiliser production capacity is being restored.

How many farms were seized by the political elite and the securocrats? In
the Masvingo study, very few. Three quarters of redistributed land went to
small-scale farmers on A1 plots. Half of all beneficiaries were ordinary
people from rural areas and another 18% were ordinary people from towns.
Civil servants made up 16% of the total, security-service personnel and
business people about 5% respectively, and farmworkers about 7%. Urban
residents and civil servants made up the bulk of the A2 settlers on
medium-scale farms.

The pattern is undoubtedly different on high-potential farms in the
Mashonaland provinces and around Harare, but other studies in these areas
show that much land went to people with low incomes and few assets. Here the
big losers were clearly farmworkers, some of whom now work for land-reform
beneficiaries, but many of whom have been displaced to the margins of the
economy.

Research thus reveals that Zimbabwe's land redistribution has reduced gross
racial and class inequalities in land ownership and has brought into being a
potentially productive agrarian structure.

This is not to deny that aspects of the land-reform process have been highly
problematic. It is clear from the wider literature that land invasions in
different parts of the country were often accompanied by violence and human
rights abuses. Some members of the Zanu-PF-aligned elite have grabbed
multiple farms, particularly on the Highveld. This is the key problem to be
addressed in a land audit being designed at present. Many farmworkers were
abused and lost their jobs.

Acknowledging that land reform has had positive impacts should not cloud the
fact that some of the ordinary people who benefited from redistribution have
subsequently been kicked off farms by cronies or securocrats. Large-scale
biofuel projects currently being planned by business interests linked to the
state and the security apparatus may lead to further land dispossession.

What is the way forward from here? Suggestions that a new Zimbabwean
government should attempt to reconstruct the old dualistic farming sector
dominated by large-scale commercial farming will encounter strong political
resistance from the many ordinary Zimbabweans who have benefited from land
reform. In any event a key component of the Global Political Agreement is
that land reform is irreversible.

The central challenge of land policy in Zimbabwe is rather to build on the
emerging successes of the new farmers and foster a dynamic and efficient
agrarian economy with strong links to industry and the urban economy.

Resolving uncertainties around land rights and land administration is
critically important. Attempts by the elite to extend their land holdings
should be exposed. These are the issues that media reports, editorials and
public debates on Zimbabwe's land reform should focus on, rather than tired
stereotypes of "disaster and failure".

*Professor Ben Cousins holds the DST/NRF research chair in poverty, land and
agrarian studies at the University of the Western Cape*

*Source: Mail & Guardian Online
Web Address:
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2010-05-20-time-to-ditch-the-disaster-scenarios
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