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Food
shortages could worsen as workers leave farms
IRIN News
January
22, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57153
BULAWAYO - Commercial
farmers and agricultural experts have warned of a serious shortage
of farm workers, which could further cripple agricultural production
in Zimbabwe.
Wilson Nyabonde, president
of the Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers Union (CFU) told IRIN that a
deadlock over an increase in monthly wages and worsening conditions
of service on farms had hastened the exodus of workers, who want
salaries raised from about US$120 (at the official exchange rate)
to at least US$500. This would still be well below the US$1,406
a month needed for a family of six to survive in Zimbabwe, where
annual inflation is hovering around 1,200 percent.
The CFU said it was difficult
to establish how many workers were still on farms. According to
a report by the Farm Community Trust of Zimbabwe, a nongovernmental
organisation assisting farm workers, before the fast-track land
reform process began in 2000, an estimated 320,000 to 350,000 agricultural
workers were employed on commercial farms owned by about 4,500 white
farmers. Their dependents numbered around 2 million - over 20 percent
of the population.
By the beginning of 2003,
the CFU estimated that only about 100,000 workers were still employed
on farms.
"The situation on
the farms is really bad at the moment. Farm workers are in such
short supply that farmers have to share workers in some cases. Employees
can leave at any time because they are in demand everywhere, and
that has destabilised the sector in many ways," Nyabonde said.
"Tobacco faming, which relies heavily on consistent and skilled
labour, is the most heavily affected, and we fear that this will
have the effect of lowering production ... come harvesting time."
Agricultural production
in Zimbabwe, once known as southern Africa's breadbasket, has slumped
since 2000, when veterans of the war against colonialism led thousands
of landless blacks onto commercial farms and forcefully removed
the white farmers.
Commercial farm managers
and workers on estates near Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo, told
IRIN that the labour crisis was deepening each day.
"In November, there
were 25 farm workers permanently employed here. Since the beginning
of the farming season they have been leaving after it became clear
that the farmers will not be able to effect salary increases demanded
by the workers, because we are facing a serious financial crisis,"
said Wilton Cadder, who manages an estate on the outskirts of Bulawayo.
Most farm workers had
turned to informal mining and dealing in scarce commodities on the
parallel market because these activities offered a better return
than working on a farm.
"They do not go
too far, they just leave the compound and head for the nearest gold
panning camps. Most of them return to the farms to entice their
former colleagues to join them. We wish we can offer better salaries,
but the conditions do not allow it because of the expensive nature
of commercial farming in this country," Cadder told IRIN.
Battling the world's
highest annual rate of inflation - now around 1,200 percent - as
well as foreign exchange shortages and a fuel price that shot up
to US$15 a litre this week, agriculture, like all other sectors
of the country's economy, has been limping along under the prohibitive
costs of importing spare parts for farming equipment and inputs
like fertilisers and seeds.
Farm workers told IRIN
they would rather be gold panners and informal market dealers than
work for US$120 a month. "The farmers offer poor salaries,
poor accommodation and there is nothing to call a pension. We all
have children who need to go to school, get enough food and clothing.
No one can make ends meet with that, so we are forced to choose
between loyalty to our longstanding employers and the demands of
survival," said farm worker Kholwani Sibanda, 40.
Incentives were being
offered in a bid to hold on to skilled workers. "Some [tobacco]
farmers are now paying performance-related bonuses to ensure that
they do not lose specialised workers; others are now offering food
and better accommodation in a bid to attract and retain employees,"
Nyabonde said.
Edward Mkhosi, shadow
minister of agriculture in the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change, called for government intervention to help the financially
stricken farmers support their workers.
"My assessment of
the situation on the farms shows that there is a great need for
the improvement of salaries and working conditions, but the reality
is that no farmer can do that at the moment: inputs are not only
expensive, they are also scarce," Mkhosi told IRIN.
"All these expenses
take a toll on the farmer, who may find it impossible to remain
viable by increasing salaries at a time when every other cost is
rising. The farmers need government support so that they in turn
can improve the working conditions of the workers. The problem lies
with the lack of government support for the sector, despite all
the rhetoric we hear," he said.
Agriculture minister
Joseph Made was noncommittal during an interview with IRIN, but
maintained that "government has no business in telling the
farmers how to retain their workers - they need to negotiate with
them and offer incentives. We are aware that there is a labour crisis
on the farms, but it is not so big that we can expect reduced harvests.
We have always produced, while the workers shifted from employer
to employer."
The government
has consistently denied the existence of food shortages. In late
2006 the Grain Marketing Board said Zimbabwe was expecting a surplus
above its annual cereal requirement of about 1.9 million metric
tonnes. However, independent estimates suggested that only 800,000mt
of maize was produced, or less than half the country's annual requirement.
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