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A
few home truths won't hurt cry baby farmers
Mavis
Makuni, The Financial Gazette (Zimbabwe)
May 04, 2006
http://www.fingaz.co.zw/story.aspx?stid=1059
RESERVE Bank Governor
Gideon Gono seems to be the only public official who is honest enough
to consistently dish out "tough love" as the only way to tackle
some of the country's self-inflicted troubles and crises.
Not long ago, the
Central Bank boss violated a long standing taboo by pointing fingers of
accusation at the establishment for the rampant corruption that has changed
the way virtually everything is done in Zimbabwe. He wiped the smug look
off the faces of most chefs when he declared that most of them were guilty
of corrupt activities and dealings particularly with regard to the distribution
of fuel and farm inputs. "If as a country we do not resolutely stamp
out growing corruption, especially among us people in positions of authority
and influence, us the so-called chefs, if we do not stamp out the indiscipline
in our midst, we will soon discover too late that policy formulations
. . . have been (based) on self-interest at the expense of the national
good", the governor declared in March while presenting his monetary
policy review.
Gono had previously
been equally candid when he railed against farm invasions that continued
to take place long after the government had declared the land reform programme
completed. He described the invaders as saboteurs. Now, in an equally
brutally frank statement, the governor has slammed some new tobacco farmers
who have failed to make the grade for demanding to be perpetually mollycoddled
through the provision of "infinite subsidies". The governor
made his remarks after the farmers had complained about the inadequacy
of the RBZ's 35 percent early delivery bonus.
He said these farmers,
particularly "low-yield marginal farmers" tended to shout the
loudest and it was time to tell them some hard truths, including the fact
that they should only grow crops they are best qualified to grow.
Gono's is always like
a voice in the wilderness and the situation is rendered more ironic when
it is considered that he has to shout himself hoarse to deal with a mess
created by other people who have conveniently fallen silent. The problems
being faced with regard to the quality of tobacco being delivered to the
auction floors is a by-product of the haphazard and chaotic manner in
which the land reform programme was implemented.
Failure to differentiate
between populist rhetoric and the practicalities of agricultural production
resulted in hundreds of thousands of people becoming "instant farmers"
regardless of whether or not they had the foggiest idea about what was
involved in commercial agriculture. It has slowly become abundantly clear
that even with the best revolutionary intentions in the world, a person
who has no aptitude for farming and the wherewithal to undertake it cannot,
with his or her bare hands, produce crops of acceptable quality and adequate
quantities. These are some of the issues that were overlooked in the implementation
of the land redistribution exercise and now that they can no longer be
concealed or attributed to scapegoats they should be revisited and addressed
honestly.
It is a matter of
record however, that anyone who tried to draw attention to these oversights
and omissions at the height of the land acquisition programme was accused
of being an enemy of the state and an opponent of an exercise which sought
to correct historical injustices and empower the black people. But empowerment
is totally meaningless and misplaced if, as Gono has indicated, the beneficiaries
of a dispensation that is supposed to make them productive and economically
independent, become "cry babies" who cannot be weaned from the
fiscal breast. It means ultimately, that taxpayers and consumers who are
preached to endlessly about the glories of land reform are forced to foot
the bill for the ineptitude and non-productivity of these "farmers."
If people in government
are honest, they should admit that no one, not even the British government,
has ever opposed land redistribution per se. Most critics have only expressed
reservations over the violent methodology used, which did not allow for
adequate forward planning to eliminate most of the snags that have bogged
down the entirely justifiable initiative, triggering an economic crisis
that now seems insurmountable. When commercial agricultural land was in
the hands of white commercial farmers, Zimbabwean tobacco was highly priced
and in great demand on the international market. But even at this time
when the crop earned the country most of its foreign currency, not all
the 4 000 commercial farmers were experts in growing tobacco. Today, we
are told there are 30 000 new tobacco producers. The authorities must
accept that while this free-for-all approach may have been politically
expedient, it has been disastrous in terms of production. It has been
a case of too many cooks spoiling the broth with the result that where
before perhaps one farmer delivered a consignment of quality tobacco we
now have 5 000 tiny lots of poor quality produce.
Gono said, "
If you come to my farm, you will see that I venture into crops I am able
to grow. I do not grow tobacco. But those crops I am able to grow, I grow
them well." This is sound advice that should be heeded regardless
of whether the crop in question is maize, wheat, soya beans or tobacco.
If these hard truths are not faced, agriculture will continue to be a
millstone around the nation's neck instead of being a source of economic
wealth and food security. More officials should join Gono in conceding
that some mistakes were made and they need to be corrected.
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