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Digging
for hope in land reform
Stephanie
Nieuwoudt, Inter Press Service
August 12, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=43532
Through the
difficulties facing the land reform process in Zimbabwe, South Africa
and Namibia, glimmers of hope are emerging. The challenge now is
to seek lessons which enable newly settled farmers to create a livelihood.
Finding these lessons
is the task of the 'Livelihoods after Land Reform' project, which
focusses on the impact of land reform policies on poverty reduction
and the way in which the livelihoods of resettled communities have
been affected.
The three-year research
project is funded by the UK-based Economic and Social Research Council
and the UK government's Department for International Development.
Different
paths
In Zimbabwe 'fast track'
land reform resulted in 150,000 small scale farms and 15,000 larger,
more commercial farms changing hands. It happened in a chaotic and
often violent way, with the mostly white farmers being intimidated
into leaving their land. In South Africa and Namibia redistribution
is occurring in a more structured way - in South Africa people apply
for land either through restitution (where people have a historical
claim as they were removed from the land decades or centuries ago)
or redistribution (where people apply for government grants to acquire
land). Despite these differences, analysts agree the one common
factor is that land reform policies have for the most part not been
successful.
According to Ben Cousins,
director of the Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies (PLAAS),
at the University of the Western Cape, and project leader, this
can be attributed to many factors including a lack of planning,
a lack of capacity development (governments did not invest in skills
development or financial help for procuring fertiliser, seeds and
irrigation) and a lack of infrastructure to get produce to markets.
"In Zimbabwe perhaps
5 percent of the land went to those with political ties. Another
15 percent went to civil servants or others with jobs in the urban
economy. Peasant farmers got about 80 percent of the land and they
are doing much better (than the rest). This could be because they
farm in more labour intensive ways and are less dependent on purchased
inputs and fuel which have been in short supply because of wider
economic problems," Cousins said.
While Zimbabwe is widely
regarded as an economic failure, some researchers see a ray of light
emerging in the country's agricultural sector. According to Ian
Scoones, a researcher at the Institute for Development Studies at
the University of Sussex, UK, many farmers are doing surprisingly
well.
"Sure, there have
been failures, particularly in the areas where highly capitalised
farming had been taken over, or where long-nurtured market relationships
have been undermined such as in the tobacco or horticulture sector.
Getting these back on track will take time and resources. But in
other areas, where small-scale farmers have taken on land - against
all the odds, including lack of credit, poor infrastructure and
recurrent drought - many farmers with newly acquired land have been
doing surprisingly well. They have been investing in new homes,
growing herds of cattle and reaping substantial yields of crops
in good rainfall years."
However, economic instability
and hyperinflation has had a devastating impact on agriculture.
Rising fuel and food costs have made the costs of inputs and transport
prohibitive and credit sources have dried up. "This has undermined
the establishment of new farming businesses, particularly on the
small-scale commercial resettlements," said Scoones. "Those
with lower input requirements and hooked into more localised exchange
networks in the small scale farming resettlements have fared better,
but even so, recent times have been very tough for everyone."
He added: "There
are many positive dimensions to the Zimbabwean land reform and important
lessons for the region including the real potential of small-scale
agriculture, if it is given support. There is also potential for
a dynamic entrepreneurial local economy with new players emerging
in the market.
"There are multiple
examples of success in Zimbabwe alongside the better documented
examples of failure. But success must be nurtured and supported
and this will only come with sustained political and economic stability."
Limited
success
In South Africa, the
failures of land reform have also been well documented. There are
cases where groups of people have bought land but when they find
no immediate success, members opt out leaving only a core group
behind on the land; some new farmers let the land lie fallow as
they became overwhelmed by the cost and unpredictable nature of
farming; others lost interest due to a lack of government support.
But there have been a
few success stories. One of these, said Michael Aliber, a researcher
at PLAAS, was the case of 486 households who claimed restitution
land of 1600 ha in the Munzhedzi area in the Limpopo Province. In
the end only 170 of these claimant households moved into the area
but 800 non-claimant households moved there as well. These people
had no historic claim to the land, yet they set up business on plots
of 50 m X 30 m.
"It seems as if
the households who have a legal claim on the land accept the non-claimant
families," said Aliber. "This proves that there is a strong
demand for land for homestead purposes. These people are subsistence
farmers who seem to be quite content. The irony is that this is
not the kind of outcome envisioned by government who is more focused
on establishing commercial farmers. Even though Munzhedzi is clearly
working and there is a huge need for small plots, subsistence farming
is not an acceptable concept to government and as yet there is no
help for people who want only a small piece of land."
Namibia too has had more
failures than successes. "Just after independence in 1990 a
national land reform conference was held which lay the foundation
for a peaceful land reform process," said land reform expert
Willem Odendaal. "However, the land reform process is taking
place much too slowly for most people."
Namibia is the most arid
country in sub-Saharan Africa which means that there is limited
agricultural potential -- most farmers opt for livestock. Subsidies
to farmers have shrunk and the competition in global markets has
increased. Along with rising fuel costs, there is not much incentive
for established farmers to keep on farming. There is also very little
government initiative to support resettlement.
Yet many resettled farmers
have been successful, despite the obstacles, said Odendaal. "For
them it is also extremely important that they are now independent
people who work for themselves."
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