|
Back to Index
ZIMBABWE:
No support for struggling new farmers
IRIN News
September 19, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=55626
HARARE - The
government's withdrawal of free agricultural inputs for new farmers
is certain to affect food production adversely, analysts are warning.
Farmers who were allocated
land under the fast-track land reform programme that began in 2000
have received fertilisers and seed for the past three years, for
which they could pay after the harvest, but last month the agriculture
ministry announced that it had stopped the "free" inputs
scheme.
"Government cannot
do everything for the farmers and we are saying, 'let the farmers
have the initiative'," the ministry's permanent secretary,
Simon Pazvakavambwa, told a parliamentary committee.
Denford Chimbwanda, chairman
of the Grain and Cereal Producers Association (GCPA), told IRIN
that while farmers should not look to government for permanent subsidies,
completely withdrawing support was "disastrous".
"The decision to
discontinue loaning out inputs is going to seriously compromise
our preparations and production targets. The withdrawal of support
should have come in phases, and I foresee the majority of farmers
reducing the size of land they will be tilling this season,"
he said.
Most agricultural inputs
are imported and have become all but unaffordable for many farmers,
who are suffering the combined effects of Zimbabwe's steadily deteriorating
economy and last season's low yields after widespread shortages
of chemicals, fertilisers and seed.
Fertiliser companies
have hiked prices by almost 100 percent, citing a 300 percent increase
in transportation costs of the basic ingredients in fertiliser.
A 50kg bag of ammonium nitrate, used for growing maize, doubled
in price to Z$4,400 (US$17.60), while the average price on the parallel
market has reached Z$5,000 ($US20).
The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe
announced recently that it had secured a US$490 million loan for
purchasing agricultural equipment, inputs and fuel, with part of
it to be disbursed to banks for loans, although the move has not
impressed farmers, who say the money has come too late.
The multimillion dollar
loan would provide finance to companies that manufacture or import
inputs and equipment, such as tractors and irrigation equipment,
but not for farmers' immediate planting requirements.
"While the government
should be applauded for managing to obtain the money, the difference
that could make might be minimal because of ill timing," Chimbwanda
said. "The process of obtaining money from the banks takes
a long time and, while farmers might need cash to replace worn-out
equipment now, it might not be possible for them to get finance
before the rains start falling."
Terence Makuyana, 45,
who has a 50ha plot about 80km north of the capital, Harare, said
even if the banks had finance for loans, farmers like him would
find it difficult to access it.
"I have not been
able to obtain a loan from the banks, because all the time I approach
them, they say they need me to demonstrate that I have the required
experience as a farmer and have a proven record of success ... this
is my third year into farming ... [but the banks] are demanding
proof of ownership of property like a house and a car, which I don't
have," he told IRIN.
Most of the farmers who
benefited from the compulsory acquisition of land from about 4,000
white farmers have not received the promised 99-year leases that
can be used as collateral to guarantee bank loans.
"The process of
giving farmers leases is complicated, because it cannot be done
without the land being properly surveyed, and that requires money
and manpower that the government does not have," Renson Gasela,
former agricultural secretary of the opposition party, Movement
for Democratic Change, told IRIN. "The situation has been made
worse by the fact that most of the farms have been subdivided into
small plots, and providing title deeds for them might be a headache."
Agricultural analyst
Sam Moyo said new farmers lacked sufficient knowledge of how to
apply for loans, while the banks "lack the capacity to deal
with the increased numbers of new farmers".
"Apparently, these
banks have scaled down on loaning out to farmers since the new farmers
came on board," he told IRIN.
Makuyana, who grows maize
and groundnuts, said the combination of last year's poor harvests,
despite good rains during the farming season, and the withdrawal
of free inputs this year might force him to reduce his target by
half.
He has struggled to feed
his family. "I am yet to repay the government for the inputs
I received last year because I did not realise much money from the
sale of my produce owing to poor harvests," said Makuyana.
"I used the little money that I got to buy an extra beast for
draught power, because the District Development Fund (DDF) is no
longer assisting us with tractors."
The DDF provides technical
support to farmers, but more than half its fleet has been grounded
because the government does not have sufficient funds to purchase
spare parts and fuel.
Zimbabwe's government
insists that about 1.8 million tonnes of maize were harvested -
just short of the annual cereal requirement - but independent analysts
estimate that 800,000 tonnes at most were produced.
Agriculture
minister Joseph Made has said Zimbabwe was importing grain to boost
national reserves.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|