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How
not to understand Zimbabwe
David
Sanders, Ben Cousins and David Moore, Mail & Guardian (SA)
August 24, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=317573&area=/insight/insight__comment_and_analysis/
Most media coverage of
Zimbabwe unthinkingly repeats and reinforces a Western and neoliberal
perception of the history and causes of that country-s political
and economic crisis.
The dominant view is
that "socialism" explains Zimbabwe-s economic
collapse and political repression. The version perpetrated by Robert
Mugabe, on the other hand, and uncritically reproduced by many pan-Africanists,
is that he is waging a noble and just struggle against Britain and
its proxies, white farmers and the MDC.
Both these analyses are
simplistic, superficial and ahistorical.
Let us first consider
political repression. This is not a new development -- in fact,
it has been a pattern in Mugabe-s rise to power and the evolution
of Zanu-PF.
In the mid-1970s, before
Mugabe went to Mozambique to join the struggle, a new political
and military force arose -- the Zimbabwe Peoples Army. Zipa, whose
leaders identified themselves as socialists, had attempted to unite
soldiers from both Zanu and the Zimbabwean African People-s
Union. Early in 1977, Mugabe persuaded Frelimo to arrest and imprison
the Zipa leaders. Hundreds of their supporters in the camps were
tortured and killed; the rest were warned that Zanu-s axe
would descend on dissenters- necks. In 1978, more "dissident"
Zanu-PF cadres were tortured and imprisoned.
This history is not widely
known. What is widely known is the notorious assault by Zanu-PF-s
5th Brigade on Zapu cadres and ordinary residents of Matabeleland
from 1982 to 1987, which resulted in an estimated 20 000 deaths.
But the British and American governments turned a blind eye to these
events, supporting a fledgling government that remained in their
sphere of influence -- anti-Soviet and ambivalent in its support
of the ANC.
The beginning of Zimbabwe-s
economic meltdown is usually ascribed in the media to farm invasions
ordered by Mugabe in February 2000, after losing a referendum on
his attempt to revise the Constitution. This led to a sharp decline
in (mainly) foreign exchange-earning export crops. (It is important
to note that, since independence, Zimbabwe-s economy has remained
capitalist.)
To blame the farm invasions
for the economic crisis, however, is to ignore the consequences
of the 1991-96 structural adjustment programme, which led to increased
unemployment, social stresses, government corruption and a growing
parasitic middle class.
While the economic and
food crisis is usually attributed to the occupation of white commercial
farms, the key role of Zimbabwe-s small-scale farmers is generally
ignored. After 1980 the proportion of both total and marketed national
maize output contributed by small-scale farmers rose from under
10% to over 60%. Since independence smallholders have produced most
groundnuts and sorghum, and almost all vegetables sold in local
markets. By 2000 smallholders were producing over 80% of the total
cotton crop and most burley tobacco.
Meanwhile, large-scale
commercial farmers, with increasing numbers being black, retained
their dominant position in export-generating flue-cured tobacco,
dairying and specialised crops, and switched from maize to intensive
horticulture. Some ranchers moved into wildlife. These subsectors
all demand high levels of capital investment.
Replacing white commercial
farmers with the beneficiaries of "fast-track" land
reform has not in itself been the main cause of declining food supplies
since 2000. Declining agricultural output since 2000 is partly due
to the effects of the economic crisis, together with factors such
as drought and inadequate government support to land reform beneficiaries.
Rising unemployment has hurt smallholder farmers, since wages from
family members in town are used to purchase agricultural inputs.
This is not to deny that
the "fast-track" has been violent, corrupt, destructive
of farm infrastructure and poorly supported by government agricultural
services. It has led to massive displacement of farm workers, causing
untold hardship and contributing to joblessness. It has also resulted
in falling export levels, resulting in an acute shortage of foreign
exchange needed to purchase fuel and raw materials.
The current
reporting on Zimbabwe is not only superficial but also misleading.
It also limits any discourse about the lessons for South Africa-s
evolution that Zimbabwe-s experience provides.
Most South African commentators
suggest that, in light of their "analysis", socialism
has failed in Zimbabwe. On the contrary, it has never been tried.
* David Sanders
is director of the School of Public Health, and Ben Cousins is director
of the Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies, both at the University
of the Western Cape. David Moore teaches politics at the University
of KwaZulu-Natal
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