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Fate
of cotton production in Zimbabwe: Zambezi Valley case study
Ludwig Chizarura, SEATINI
January 01, 2006
http://www.seatini.org/cotton/fateOfCotton.htm
Introduction
Prior
to the land reform programme in Zimbabwe, cotton was the second
largest foreign currency-earning crop in the country grown largely
by peasants in semi-arid regions, with an average annual rainfall
of 600mm per annum and temperatures of around 30 degrees Celsius.
The purpose of the study is to identify the problems that cotton
farmers face with the view of developing a strategy that will help
revitalise the cotton sector.
The decision
to conduct the research on cotton production was arrived at against
a backdrop of the increasing dependency of the producers on food
handouts from external sources such as World Food Programme. Distributing
food to the local people has become an annual event (eventually
suspended on political grounds) despite the cash earnings from cotton.
Internationally there are grave concerns over unfavourable terms
of trade for the developing countries that are driving farmers off
land especially in West and Central Africa.
Prevalence
of Cotton Production
Nearly
all the 20 312 peasant farmers and their families in Lower Guruve
grow cotton as the principal source of cash income required to meet
daily household needs. Out of these households, approximately 40%
are female headed (the women are either widowed, divorced or have
a spouse gainfully employed outside Lower Guruve).
Around 80% of
the cultivated area is under cotton production, with the remaining
portion devoted to sorghum, groundnuts and maize grown for subsistence
purposes. The region is renowned for frequent consecutive occurrence
of droughts and occasional flooding that induce food deficits from
own production. The low rainfall and the high temperatures discourage
maize production, the national staple food. The latter wilts due
to moisture stress resulting in inevitable crop harvest failures.
Cotton is preferred due to its drought tolerance and ability to
yield cash. The proceeds from cotton are expected to cover up the
gap on food shortfalls through purchases mainly maize from the Grain
Marketing Board. Unfortunately this has not been the case over the
last four years as an increasing number of farmers turned to the
Christian Care /World Food Programme for food relief due to the
falling global market price and successive droughts. Nonetheless,
despite the decreasing returns from the crop, the farmers continue
to grow it. It is these prevailing contradictory circumstances that
have prompted an investigation into cotton production.
Marketing
System
The
introduction of the World Bank/IMF Economic Structural Adjustment
Programme (ESAP) induced a government policy change on producer
prices, which was parallel to the US EU guaranteed price policies.
In the past the government used to announce guaranteed producer
prices before the agricultural season started. With the change in
policy the setting up of prices was left to market forces, i.e.
the negotiations between the farmer organisations and the cotton
merchants during the harvesting season based on prospects on harvest
volume and quality. By introducing ESAP on the advice of the IMF
and the World Bank the government hoped to accelerate economic growth,
fund social services (health and education) and have the capacity
to create jobs for the thousands of annual school leavers (UNDP
HDR report 1999). Deregulation meant that market forces would set
the prices. The new system brought insecurity to the farmers, as
they no longer enjoyed guaranteed pre-planting prices. They were
no longer able to plan investments in production or at the household
level. They produce and then wait for the announcement of producer
prices during the harvesting season. They have turned into a situation
of being price-takers in a market of almost perfect competition
and decreasing returns.
The negotiations
between the representatives of farmer organisations and the cotton
companies are heavily tilted in favour of the latter. While the
companies base the producer price on the international value, the
farmers take into account the costs of production. Thus disagreements
inevitably arise between the two parties. The price offered by merchants
usually prevails with minor adjustments. The matter came to a boil
point during the 2004 marketing season, with farmers demanding at
least Z$3000/kg while the merchants offeredZ$1800/kg. The final
price agreed on after the intervention of the Minister of Agriculture
was settled at Z$ 1900/kg. It is clear that at the marketing stage
there is an unequal negotiating power between the two parties. It
is the merchants that are in a position of strength.
Farming
Practices
Prior
to the calculation of net returns from cotton, it was found necessary
to classify farmers according to their practical production practices.
The classification is important in determining costs of production
that are incurred by the farmers. An Arex field officer provided
the following information on farming practices.
With reference
to tillage, 7% use tractors 60% animal traction and 33% are dependent
on hand tillage. During the last two seasons the percentage using
tractors declined to 4% due to scarcity and sharp increase in the
price of diesel (while the official price was Z$ 200/litre, the
diesel was obtainable at Z$ 3500/litre on the parallel market) and
the high repair and maintenance costs of tractors. Animal traction
appears on the increase as more and more farmers acquire cattle
simultaneously abandoning tractorisation due to its ever-increasing
costs . The majority of farmers dependent on hand tillage reside
in tsetse-infested areas where the rearing of cattle is prohibitive.
The method of
tillage used determines significantly areas under cotton. On average
those using tractors cultivate 7acres of cotton, animal traction
5 acres and hand tillage 2 acres. AREX officers claim that these
methods influence the ultimate productivity of the crop. Where tractor
and animal traction are used weed control is more effective and
moisture retention is improved as opposed to hand tillage. This
implies that hand tillage depresses productivity by 7/2% and 5/2%
respectively.
Around 45% of
the farmers use fertilisers, in this case mineral compound L and
AN in cultivating the crop. The remaining proportion does not apply
fertilisers either because the farmers cannot afford it or have
a belief that it destroys soil fertility. Whatever the case productivity
is compromised by 6/2%. While those farmers with draught power and
applying fertilisers realise around 6 bales per ha, their counterparts
dependent on hand tillage and averse to fertilisers only get around
2 bales per hectare.
There are few
agricultural extension workers and therefore extension services
for the farmers are very poor. The ratio is one extension worker
to 5000 farmers when the ideal one should be 1: 200. Government
extension services are complemented by cotton merchants’ (Cargill
and CCZ) extension services monitoring their specific interests
on input use and cotton crop performance. This is done to ensure
that cotton inputs are not abused and all the produce is delivered
to the input-supporting agency in order to avoid side marketing.
Cotton merchants’ services are restricted to their clients and the
cotton crop.
Returns
From Cotton (To continue)
The
above account gives the overall picture of agricultural practises
in Lower Guruve. The remaining challenge is to empirically demonstrate
the trends in financial terms on what the farmers have been getting
during the last 5 seasons by assessing costs against the corresponding
producer prices.
|
Cotton
Production per Hectare (not inflation adjusted)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Year
|
|
|
1999-2000
|
2000-2001
|
2001-2002
|
2002-2003
|
2003-2004
|
| |
|
Quantity
|
Cost
(Z$)
|
Cost
(Z$)
|
|
|
|
|
Av. Yield/ha
(bales)
|
4 |
|
4 |
4 |
4 |
4 |
|
Av.
Price/kg (Z$)
|
|
|
14.00
|
22.00
|
26.00 |
|
2,000.00 |
|
Labour
(Z$)
|
|
38 days
|
1,340.00
|
3,550.00 |
3,800.00 |
|
986,000.00 |
|
Seed
|
|
|
525.00 |
1,225.00 |
1,500.00
|
|
89,000.00 |
|
Fertilisers
|
AN
|
2
|
856.00 |
2,980.00 |
2,988.00 |
|
97,000.00 |
| |
Cpd L
|
4
|
2,580.00
|
10,073.00
|
11,064.00 |
|
249,600.00 |
|
Herbicides
|
Triff
|
|
294.40 |
|
|
|
|
| |
Parquet
|
|
341.40 |
|
|
|
6,700.00 |
| |
Lasso
|
|
|
2,880.00 |
2,895.00 |
|
64,200.00 |
| |
Bladex
|
|
|
2,790.00 |
4,982.00 |
|
213,750.00 |
|
Pesticides
|
Carbaryl
|
|
736.00 |
3,036.00 |
3,776.00 |
|
14,600.00 |
| |
Endosulfan
|
725.00 |
|
|
|
|
| |
Marshal
|
|
393.00 |
2,670.00 |
|
|
|
| |
Red spider
kill
|
123.60 |
|
|
|
|
| |
Dimethoate
|
|
|
1,172.00 |
|
7,080.00 |
| |
Fenkil
|
|
|
1,265.00 |
1,762.00 |
|
6,700.00
|
| |
Thionex
|
|
|
|
|
|
19,350.00 |
|
Transport
(inputs)
|
|
|
170.00 |
440.00 |
990.00 |
|
25,000.00 |
|
Transport
(bales)
|
|
|
720.00 |
1,864.80 |
4,195.80 |
|
|
|
Total
Production Costs
|
|
8,804.40
|
32,773.80
|
39,124.80 |
0.00 |
1,778,980.00 |
|
Cost
of production per kg
|
|
11.01
|
40.97 |
48.91 |
0.00 |
2223.73 |
|
Net
profit/loss per kg
|
|
2.99
|
-18.97 |
-22.91 |
0.00 |
-223.73 |
The production
costs do not include tillage. This cost item was deliberately left
out because of the huge disparity in levels between the three methods
of tillage used. Inclusion of mechanised tillage costs for example
would heavily inflate the production costs, making cotton production
even less viable to the farmers.
Another point
worthy noting from the above table is the rotation in the type of
chemicals used. This is deliberately done (though scarcity during
the last four seasons had an effect) in order to avoid pest resistance
to a particular pesticide.
The figures
reveal a negative drift in returns from cotton production per kg.
It is consistent with the global trend of depressed producer prices
since the mid-90s against a backdrop of increasing input prices
putting small producers from developing countries under pressure
to give up cotton production.
Notwithstanding
the hyperinflationary conditions prevailing in Zimbabwe, the trend
may explain the increasing dependency on food from outside as farm
incomes fall due to increased costs of production and a slump in
cotton prices. The years 2000 to 2003 were so unstable that the
discrepancy between official and parallel market exchange rates
was at its peak. The parallel market during the two-year period
was the primary source of foreign currency. Sanity to the financial
sector was restored in December 2003 with the announcement of a
new monetary policy.
Perceptions
on Returns
Cotton
Merchants
While
admitting that that there is a global depression on cotton prices,
cotton companies tend to view inefficiency of farmers as the primary
factor for the reduced farm incomes. Therefore the figures presented
above on yields are to them unacceptable. The acceptable yield per
hectare for an efficient farmer should be 7 bales per hectare. Such
a level of production would lower production costs and increase
net profit per kg as demonstrated in the table below.
Net
profit Assuming Maximum Yield of 7 bales (1bale=200kg)
| |
|
1999-2000
|
2000-2001
|
2001-2002
|
2002-2003
|
2003-2004
|
| |
|
(Z$)
|
(Z$)
|
(Z$)
|
(Z$)
|
(Z$)
|
|
Maximum
yield (bales)
|
7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cost
of production per kg
|
|
6.29
|
23.41
|
27.95
|
0.00
|
1270.70
|
|
Net
profit/loss per kg
|
|
7.71
|
-1.41
|
-1.95
|
0.00
|
729.30
|
According to
the merchants, farmers are realising low yields because, instead
of applying inputs procured on credit to the crop, they sell them
especially to salaried rural workers at give away prices. Therefore
productivity without doubt declines and consequently huge debts
are incurred through abuse of the input credit scheme. Furthermore
farmers exhibit disloyalty by side marketing, whereby beneficiaries
of the input credit schemes take business to competitors in search
of better prices at the expense of the traditional buyers who financed
cotton production in the first place. The announced prices are a
direct response to market forces. Since 70% of the cotton lint is
exported, the merchants believe that they would incur losses if
they were to accept prices advocated by the farmers, which are well
above the international price.
Empirically
in the area under study less than 5% of the farmers can achieve
a yield of 7 bales per hectare. The practice of procuring inputs
on credit and then selling them below cost is a response to immediate
cash needs especially during the summer season when most households
run out of food. Side marketing is a desperate attempt to maximise
earnings from one’s produce as a result of the weak bargaining position
the SAPs had brought to them and the declining world market prices.
Both practices arise out of desperation.
Growers
Growers
feel that they are being short-changed by the cotton merchants.
They admit to abuse of the input credit scheme and side marketing,
but view the producer prices as the primary cause of the malpractices.
The local authorities support their perception. They do not believe
that the prevailing agronomic conditions in Lower Guruve can sustain
a yield of 7 bales per acre. The realistic output figures are between
2-4 bales per hectare given the high cost of inputs and the unpredictable
weather patterns. They consider the idealised figure to be hypothetical.
They want to have an input in price setting that they feel are being
denied. The ultimate price should enable them to recoup in full
the production costs incurred.
Reliance on
external food handouts, side marketing and abuse of input scheme
are viewed as legitimate strategies by the farmers particularly
those who harvest at most 2 bales per hectare to keep their heads
above water. In extreme cases others resort to cross-border trading,
poaching and gold panning activities which are illegal, in order
to survive.
As a way forward,
they would like to see an increase in producer prices in tandem
with the increase in inputs costs (on which they have no control)
through their effective participation in price setting. The farmers
perceive the present system employed by cotton merchants as not
taking into account the farmers’ production costs.
Conclusion
While
acknowledging the influence of the global price on local producer
prices, the cotton merchants still regard the irresponsible behaviour
of the farmers as the primary factor. On the other hand the farmers
believe that their non-participation in price setting is responsible
for the ever-decreasing returns from cotton. Both sides are focusing
on national factors without seriously considering the international
dimension as the primary factors. Farmers feel the pressure exerted
on them by input suppliers while the cotton merchants feel the same
from the international price.
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