AFRICA: Economies worst placed to cope with knock-on effects of drought

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


NAIROBI, 27 March (IRIN) - Many African economies, which largely rely on 
agricultural revenue, are the least equipped to deal with the devastating 
impact of regular drought, economists have said. 

About 43 percent of Africa's land surface is arid and low rainfall is 
considered a normal fact of life. However, drought, which used to occur on 
average every five to six years, has been happening more frequently over the 
last 12 years. It is the single most important natural hazard in terms of 
shattered livelihoods, starvation, deaths and nutrition-related diseases on the 
continent. 

While drought occurs all over the world, seven out of the 10 most vulnerable 
countries -- Somalia, Sudan, Ethiopia, Uganda, Chad, Mauritania and Mozambique 
-- are in Africa. Droughts in the early 1970s, 1980s, the beginning of the 
1990s and 2001 affected some 50 million Africans. Between 1980 and 2000, 
drought killed more than two million people in just three countries: Ethiopia, 
Sudan and Mozambique. Almost one million of them died in Ethiopia's famine of 
1984. 

Beyond the human cost, drought in Africa causes economic losses of tens of 
millions of dollars and can reverse years of national development gains. The 
crushing impact is much greater for pastoralists or subsistence farmers, who 
together make up some 69 percent of Kenya's workforce and 83 percent of 
Ethiopia's, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation 
(FAO). 

Worthless livestock

The current drought across northern Kenya, southern Ethiopia and southwest 
Somalia has caused market prices for livestock to collapse. In Wajir, a Kenyan 
provincial capital 650 km northeast of Nairobi, the cost of an adult cow has 
fallen from 7,000 Kenya shillings (US $96) to 800 shillings ($11). Camels fetch 
less than 5,000 shillings ($68), down from 20,000 shillings ($274). Herdsmen, 
whose whole livelihoods are tied up in their animals, have seen the value of 
their entire worldly assets stripped, thanks to the drought. 

"I have walked for three days to bring these animals here, and now I have to 
sell them at whatever price I am offered because they will not be strong enough 
to walk back again," said Hussein Aden, 25, who had led his family's last four 
camels to Wajir market.

The effects of drought are "insidious" due to their "'creeping nature", 
according to Eric Patrick of the Drylands Development Centre of the UN 
Development Programme (UNDP). "Human mortality is simply the end state of this 
process," Patrick wrote in a February 2005 discussion paper presented at a 
conference in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, on the economic impact of drought. 

Staple prices soar

During a drought crisis, the local economy in affected areas collapses first, 
when people have few savings or assets to help them through. Prices for staples 
like maize soar - for example, in March, in the Juba region of Somalia, 1 kg of 
maize cost US 25 cents, 70 percent higher than four months earlier, said 
Nicholas Haan, chief technical advisor for the UN's Food Security Analysis Unit 
(FSAU). Sorghum prices have jumped 66 percent since November and are their 
highest in the 10 years FSAU has been operating in Somalia. The situation is 
the same across northern Kenya, aid agencies report.

Households have adopted a number of consumption coping strategies in response 
to their decreased purchasing power, including reducing how much and how often 
they eat (once a day instead of three times); switching to lower-quality, 
cheaper cereals; seeking gifts of food; and relying on relatives, social 
support and humanitarian assistance. Without money from their livestock to buy 
essentials like maize, tea, sugar and soap, herdsmen also turn to traders for 
credit. In good times, this is rarely a problem, but when debtors have little 
chance to pay back what they owe, shopkeepers cut off credit lines. Across some 
parts of northern Kenya, locals have reported that even the shops had closed.

"During lean periods, the shops would bail us out with credit," Mohamed Ali, a 
resident of Dambas in Wajir district, where 98 percent of the population 
currently relies on food aid, told British aid organisation Oxfam. "But now 
nearly all the shops have been run down by giving too much credit and not 
receiving any payment back. I don't know how we'll get through this period. So 
many people are on the brink."

Marginalised communities 

Countries with economies that are relatively simple and predominantly 
agricultural suffer most under drought conditions. The effect of drought 
increases their balance of trade deficits, donor and food aid dependency, urban 
migration of poor people and the costs of service provision and welfare. 

The regions of Kenya and Ethiopia that are most severely affected by the 
current drought lie far from their capitals, and their populations historically 
have been seen as having only peripheral importance to the national economy. 
Investment in these regions is limited, forcing more people to live below the 
poverty line. Governments have been accused of reacting slower than they would 
if a region with greater economic importance faced the same problems. 

"It is nonsense to say that these areas do not contribute to the economy," said 
Douglas Keatinge, spokesman of Oxfam. In 2002, the latest year for which 
figures are available, 10 percent of Kenya's gross domestic product (GDP) came 
from its trade in livestock. It is expected a similar slice of each year's 
national earnings in other countries in the region comes from the same trade, 
which is now likely to be severely curtailed, impacting a country's overall 
earnings. 

"The governments know that, and they have policies and planned policies - like 
Kenya's Arid Lands Development Policy -- but they just need to be implemented 
properly. It is incumbent on governments to address the needs for basic 
services in these regions, so populations are better placed to deal with 
drought when it comes," said Keatinge.

Kenya's government is now a key player in the overall response to the country's 
food crisis. Behind the United States, it is the second biggest donor to the 
food appeal launched to tackle the drought's effects, having spent $52.5 
million from its own budget to feed those in need. 

Diversify to survive 

In countries such as South Africa, whose economies Eric Patrick of UNDP 
described as "intermediate" or semi-industrialised, the impacts of drought are 
better absorbed by a more complex and diversified economy. Similarly, in 
mineral-exporting countries such as Botswana and Namibia, the impacts are 
cushioned by the mining sectors of the economy, which are not linked to 
weather-dependent agricultural sectors.  Furthermore, because fewer people earn 
their livings purely from agriculture, fewer are affected when drought strikes. 

Kenya's economy, however, is largely driven by exports of tea, coffee, flowers 
and packaged vegetables, and on tourism. All these sectors have been affected. 
The Kenya Tea Board reported in February 2006 that the expected yield for that 
month was likely to be 50 percent less than the same period a year before. 
Seven private tea factories have temporarily closed, waiting for the rains to 
come. James Finlay Ltd has sent all but 2,700 of its 13,000 employees home on 
early annual leave, and the remaining staff is working six hours a day instead 
of 12. 

The shortage has sent prices at the Mombasa tea auction to record highs, yet 
the price gains are not nearly enough to offset the loss in sales. The Tea 
Board of Kenya warned late in February that the drought could cost the country 
$111 million in revenue in 2006. If it does not rain soon, that may be a 
conservative estimate. Irrigation for flower farms, which earn Kenya some $225 
million a year, is putting further strain on limited water resources. 

Tourism sector

Wildlife in game parks is also struggling to survive, with KWS reporting the 
deaths of 100 hippos in various reserves and the risk of an anthrax outbreak in 
northern regions, where rare Grevy's zebra are dying in increasing numbers. 
Kenya's tourism industry is the country's fourth highest earner in terms of 
foreign currency, bringing $682 million into the economy in 2005, or 14 percent 
of GDP. If the country's famous game parks empty of animals, the tourist 
numbers could drop, putting the livelihoods of hotel staff, tour guides, 
vehicle mechanics and thousands of other employees at huge risk.

Drought in Tanzania has slashed power generation in the country's six 
hydropower stations to less than one-third of their usual output, forcing 
electricity rationing to be extended. More than two-thirds of Tanzania's total 
generation capacity is hydroelectric, meaning power rationing affects 
businesses nationwide, as they are forced to turn to expensive diesel 
generators to maintain their production. "This situation is not just bad, it is 
scary," President Jakaya Kikwete told an energy conference in Dar es Salaam in 
February.

Knock-on effects 

In many countries, the frequency, duration and severity of drought can have 
significant impact on the GDP and reverse many apparently unrelated investments 
in national development. Drought in a simple or intermediate economy can have a 
particularly significant impact on the economy, both directly and through 
knock-on effects.  

For example, the 1990-1991 drought in Zimbabwe resulted in a 45 percent drop in 
national agricultural production, 62 percent in the stock market, 9 percent in 
manufacturing output and 1 percent in the GDP. The 1999-2001 drought in Kenya 
cost the economy some $2.5 billion. As a proportion of the national economy, 
this figure is a very significant loss and can best be thought of as foregone 
development -- for example, in roads, schools and hospitals not being built. 

"It is also 10 percent of your population without food and facing starvation -- 
that is going to challenge any economy," said Oxfam's Keatinge. 

A worldwide survey of drought-prone societies by UNDP revealed that the way 
countries manage the risk of drought depends partly on their level of economic 
development. The study found a very high inverse correlation between the GNP 
and human mortality in the face of drought.  

Developed economies

Most of the human fatalities from drought and related disasters are experienced 
in developing countries, while developed countries record only economic losses 
that are easily absorbed by their larger economies. Drought in African 
countries, like Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia, may cause major human suffering 
and loss of life, whilst a drought of a similar severity elsewhere would have 
only an economic impact.  

For example, the drought of 1988 in the US caused an estimated damage of $40 
billion due to direct and knock-on effects on the economy. The size of the US 
economy was sufficient to absorb this shock. An African country with a simple 
agricultural economy would have struggled to bounce back.

Analysts have already warned that the eastern Africa nations currently 
suffering from prolonged drought might not be able to recover. It could take a 
herdsman who has lost 120 cows, an average herd, 15 years to recoup his losses, 
given fair prices and average rains, Oxfam calculated. "Pastoralism is a viable 
livelihood and makes an important contribution to the Kenyan economy. But there 
is an urgent need for improved development and economic policies in drought 
affected areas," said Paul Smith-Lomas, Oxfam's regional director.

Development projects, however, are taking a back seat to the more pressing need 
of keeping people alive. Money spent on emergency relief essentially comes from 
the same pot as that which would be used for development, said FSAU's Nicholas 
Haan. "It is very difficult to pinpoint the figures, but it is fair to say the 
amount of money appealed for to alleviate the effects of the drought dwarf 
those which are routinely needed for development, for rangeland rehabilitation, 
educational programmes, diversification of livestock, teaching improved fishing 
techniques," Haan said.

"If we had those medium- to long-term programmes in place, the resilience of 
the population and the regional economy to deal with the shock of drought would 
be that much stronger," he said. "But without the development there, these 
people are as weak as they have ever been in the face of these challenges."
[ENDS]

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