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ZIMBABWE:
Size of pockets to decide food security
IRIN
News
May 16, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=53374
JOHANNESBURG
- Affordability and not availability will determine food security
in Zimbabwe in the coming months, analysts said after the government
announced it was expecting a much-improved maize crop this year.
"With inflation at 1,042.9 percent, most food items are beyond ordinary
Zimbabweans' reach," commented John Makumbe, a senior political
science lecturer at the University of Zimbabwe.
Minister of Agriculture Joseph Made told parliament on Monday that
the country was expected to produce 1.8 million mt of maize, the
official Herald newspaper reported. Most food security analysts
believe that Zimbabwe's annual requirement is 1.4 million mt.
The Zimbabwean government had banned independent crop surveys, including
a joint assessment with the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation.
An earlier forecast by the United States Department of Agriculture
estimated production at 900,000 mt, an improvement on last year's
disasterous crop as a result of good rainfall.
Zimbabwe is recovering from four years of food shortages caused
by erratic weather conditions, the impact of the chaotic fast-track
land reform programme on the agricultural sector and a critical
lack of foreign currency to import inputs, such as fuel and fertiliser.
In recent years the government has battled to provide maizemeal
at subsidised prices to help contain the crisis, and shortages have
been a recurrent problem.
"Affordability will be the key test: while maizemeal is affordable,
as its price is controlled by government, ordinary Zimbabweans cannot
buy other equally important sources of vitamins, such as vegetables,
or protein, such as dairy or meat," said an analyst who did not
want to be named. A kilo of meat can cost up to US$9 and a loaf
of bread almost 80 US cents, but most households earn less than
$100 a month.
The government's attempts to control prices has helped fuel inflation,
according to Makumbe. The government has been buying maize from
farmers at $306 per tonne and then selling it at a subisdised rate
of about $20 per tonne to millers. "So how is government covering
the loss in the transaction? By printing more money."
Makumbe said the government was "desperate to show that their land
reform exercise, which they have been implementing since 2000, has
worked, and that they have been able to produce more than the white
commercial farmers".
The evidence, however, is that agricultural output - which underpinned
the economy - suffered a severe setback, affecting export earnings,
due in part to the government's difficulty in supporting the new
farmers.
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