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Land reform in Zimbabwe: a cure for poverty?
Id21.org
December 20,
2006 http://www.id21.org/urban/u2ac1g1.html
Unjust
land distribution is a legacy of colonial policies that took resources
away from indigenous groups. At independence, many states had a
minority of white settlers owning large commercial farms while the
indigenous majority were left with small plots of land. Land redistribution
has been a policy of many governments.
An article from
the University of Manchester in the UK compares the livelihoods
of two groups settling in Hurungwe District, Zimbabwe. One group
of households was part of a planned government resettlement, while
the others settled spontaneously. In Zimbabwe, between 1980 and
2000, 91,000 families were resettled with assistance by the state,
but many more families took land for themselves in frontier districts.
The government
selected poor households with few assets or savings. Families were
placed in planned schemes to create new ‘farmers’. On arrival they
signed three permits which allowed them residence, cultivation and
grazing. The state underwrote known risks for three years. However,
once the state withdrew, the households had poorly developed support
networks.
Families in
informal settlements were less poor households and had the means
to resettle without state support. Land was cleared to stake claims
and settlers invested in moveable assets such as cattle. Households
delayed building homes in case of eviction.
Findings for
government settlements:
- State settlements
provided more and better quality land.
- Settlers
were encouraged to specialise in crop production, which worked
well in good years, but made them vulnerable to drought and changes
in input and crop prices.
- Because
there are no employment opportunities outside agriculture, land
holdings are being divided to support grown-up children and their
families.
- The intensive
state support of the 1980s and 1990s has not given official settlers
secure, sustainable livelihoods.
- Findings
for informal settlements:
- Households
developed coping strategies by forming strong networks with other
families for mutual support and aid. However, families were still
vulnerable to risks such as drought and HIV and AIDS.
- Settlers
were not restricted to agriculture and the diversification of
livelihoods gave them more opportunities to manage risk.
- Non-governmental
organisations help by instigating participatory models of resettlement.
In the short
term, land resettlement can bring relief to households in crisis
and raise the assets and incomes of poor families. In the long term,
however, land alone is not enough. Land redistribution and dryland
farming is not a complete solution for rural poverty. It may bring
persistent poverty without effective support policies and institutions.
Policy implications
include:
- Relaxed
rules on sub-division and increased taxes on land above a certain
size could encourage landowners to make more land available on
the market.
- State involvement
can be beneficial, especially if it identifies very poor and landless
families and helps them gain to access land.
- Official
policies should be flexible and accept that informal resettlement
will always occur.
- Funds should
be established to help non-poor vulnerable families wishing to
buy land.
- Diverse
livelihood strategies are an important part of risk management.
Non-farm occupations should be included at the planning stage.
Source(s): ‘Livelihood
Dynamics in Planned and Spontaneous Resettlement in Zimbabwe: Converging
and Vulnerable’, World Development 34(4), 728-750, by Admos Chimhowu
and David Hulme, 2006 Full document.
http://www.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/bwpi/about/findings/thefile,64600,en.pdf
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