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Rules of the game: Land tenure and the commercialisation of smallholder
agriculture
Dale
Doré, Sokwanele
November 12, 2013
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This paper is
part of the Zimbabwe Land
Series
Summary
The debate on
land tenure has reached an impasse. A nationalist narrative based
on the customary tenure system and state control over agricultural
land has taken root. The purpose of this paper is to move the debate
towards a more developmental approach that focuses primarily on
reducing poverty in communal and resettlement areas. History, of
course, matters. The paper therefore begins by providing a brief
stylised account of how land rights evolved. It then presents an
economic critique of how smallholders have become entrapped in a
tenure and farming system which offers neither them nor their children
much hope of escaping a life of poverty. From there, the paper presents
an alternative land tenure policy and institutional framework as
a foundation for reducing poverty by commercialising smallholder
production. It posits two main arguments. The first is that security
of tenure is a necessary condition for the commercialisation of
agriculture, but not a sufficient one. Efficient smallholder farm
production and commercialisation also require the transferability
of property. The second argument is that enclosing common property
or converting it into individual holdings is a necessary step towards
ensuring environmental sustainability.
1. The
evolution of property rights
Esther Boserup
- in her classic exposition, The Conditions of Agricultural Growth
- showed how the pressure of population on land drives changes both
to property rights and technical innovation, leading to agricultural
intensification and growth. She argued that as populations grew
and land became relatively scarce, it first became necessary to
use more labour to maintain production levels. Then, as population
continued to grow, production levels could only be maintained by
introducing technical innovations such as crop rotation and, later,
by applying fertilizers and hybrid seeds varieties. However, Boserup
made the crucial point that this process of technical intensification
was necessarily accompanied by the institutional evolution of land
rights. In other words, whereas initially households were allowed
only to continuously cultivate land, they were later able to bequeath
and sell it. Eventually, this evolutionary process of institutional
development produces a unified system of land documentation and
registration, backed up by the state’s enforcement of property
rights.
My central argument
is that the customary system of tenure, which worked perfectly adequately
in a pre-industrial era when the country was sparsely populated,
has not been allowed to evolve. Customary rules have been frozen
in time, first by the Rhodesian authorities and later by the Zimbabwe
government. The fundamental problem is that population growth has
not been accompanied by the necessary changes in the rules governing
property rights to maintain productivity. As a result, technological
innovations have not only failed to take hold in communal areas,
but under conditions of population pressure, capital is eventually
squeezed out of the agricultural system. Inevitably, most communal
areas have stagnated into pools of poverty that are environmentally
unsustainable. And worse, the spread of this tenure system into
the resettlement areas will eventually reproduce the very poverty
and environmental degradation we see in the communal areas.
2. What's
the problem?
Start with population.
As estimated 1.2 million households – nearly half Zimbabwe’s
population – live in the communal areas which cover 16.4 million
hectares, or about half of Zimbabwe’s agricultural land. The
defining feature of these areas is a customary land tenure system
whereby local leaders allocate arable land to households and their
families on a usufruct basis. This means that households have use
rights, but no rights to rent or sell their land. Another defining
feature is that households are entitled to use common property resources,
such as water for household use and irrigation, woodlands for firewood
and building, and pastures for grazing cattle and other livestock.
So, what’s the problem? There is no problem when the population
is very low. But when the customary system is faced with an unprecedented
growth in population and livestock numbers, debilitating diseconomies
make themselves felt in the absence of changes to property rights.
So how does the system conspire to perpetuate poverty?
2.1
Arable land
First consider
arable land. Because it is allocated rather than sold, the system
grants households access to land for cultivation that carries no
cost to the user. In other words, land use is fully subsidised.
This may seem like an advantage. But in the absence of a price mechanism
or market signal, there is nothing to constrain demand for this
limited and scare resource. This has four economic ramifications.
First, it distorts the allocation of inputs (factors of production)
which reduces the efficiency of farm production. Second, an ever-growing
population under a traditional system of inheritance sees plots
being continually subdivided into smaller and less viable units
of production. Third, when most of the best land has been occupied,
families in search of land spill over into more marginal areas,
leaving in their trail exhausted soils and a denuded landscape.
And, fourth, the usufruct basis of communal land rights precludes
the use of land as collateral, thus restricting the ability of communal
households to gain access to credit.
Let us consider
in a little more detail how these processes create inefficiencies,
squeeze out capital, and perpetuate poverty.
The economic
principle of optimal factor combination holds that the efficiency
of farm production requires land, labour and capital inputs (the
factors of production) to be used in such proportions that output
is maximized for a given cost. But, because land is free and labour
is relatively much cheaper than capital, households will prefer
to cultivate more land rather than using capital – notably
fertilizer – thus reducing soil fertility. This inherent bias
against capital inputs is aggravated by population growth. Because
the tenure system offers no mechanism for farmers to consolidate
plots into larger more viable units, plots are gradually subdivided
into smaller and less viable holdings. The result is obvious, as
Figure 1 shows. As plots get smaller, households’ farm surpluses
and cash earning gradually fall. With less cash to buy fertilizer,
improved seed and equipment, output falls still further. Households
thus remain trapped in a subsistence farming system that is underpinned
by customary tenure.
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