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From: Kenneth King <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tue, 23 November, 2010 4:46:26
Subject: [GlobalAfricanPresence] Zim land reform was a success: UK study

  
http://www.talkzimbabwe.com/zim-land-reform-was-a-success-uk-study-cms-916

Zim land reform was a success: UK study 

By: BBC-TZG 
Posted: Friday, November 19, 2010 11:50 am 

A UNITED Kingdom study has confirmed government reports that Zimbabwe's land 
reform programme has not been the complete economic disaster widely portrayed 
in 
the press and other international reports.

In a new study carried out by that country's Institute of Development Studies 
at 
Sussex University, confirmed that the farmers have become very productive since 
the 2000 Fast Track Land Reform Programme and subsequent land reform policies.

The study's lead author, Ian Scoones, told BBC News he was "genuinely 
surprised" 
to see how much activity was happening on the farms visited during the 10-year 
study.

"People were getting on with things in difficult circumstances and doing 
remarkably well," he said.

The policy was putting right the wrongs inherited from the pre-1980 colonial 
era, when black Zimbabweans were forced from their homelands in favour of white 
settlers.

"What we have observed on the ground does not represent the political and media 
stereotypes of abject failure," says the study - Zimbabwe's Land Reform, Myths 
and Realities.

The study, however, notes that most beneficiaries complained about the 
government not giving them the support they need, such as seeds, fertiliser and 
ploughing the land.

But he says much of the debate has been unduly politicised.

"We wanted to uncover the facts on the ground," he said.

The study found that about two-thirds of people who were given land in Masvingo 
were "ordinary" - low-income - Zimbabweans. These are the people President 
Mugabe always said his reforms were designed to help.

The remaining one-third includes civil servants (16.5%), former workers on 
white-owned farms (6.7%), business people (4.8%) and members of the security 
services (3.7%).

Of these, he estimates that around 5% are "linked to the 
political-military-security elite".

Mr Scoones says the proportion of such "cronies" being given land was a 
relatively small proportion of the overall land seized across the country.

The researchers found that, on average, each household had invested more than 
$2,000 (£1,200) on their land since they had settled on it - clearing land, 
building houses and digging wells.

This investment has led to knock-on activity in the surrounding areas, boosting 
the rural economy and providing further employment.

'Under the radar'

One of those questioned, identified only as JM, told the researchers that 
before 
being given land he had relied on help from others but now owns five head of 
cattle and employs two workers.

"The new land has transformed our lives," he said.

Others say they are much better off farming than when they had jobs.

He says that about half of those surveyed are doing well, reaping good harvests 
and reinvesting the profits.

Maize is Zimbabwe's main food crop but its production remains reliant on good 
rains and output remains well below that pre-2000. Mr Scoones says Zimbabwe's 
food crisis of 2007-8 cannot be put down to the land reform, as those people 
who 
went hungry produced a large surplus both the previous and subsequent years.

Before the "fast-track" land reform began in 2000, tobacco, mostly grown by 
white commercial farmers, was Zimbabwe's biggest cash crop.

But producing top quality tobacco requires considerable investment and 
know-how, 
both of which are lacking among many of the new black farmers.

Instead, they often grow cotton, which has now replaced tobacco as the main 
agricultural export.

Mr Scoones says those who are struggling the most are the least well-off civil 
servants, such as teachers and nurses, who have been unable to get credit and 
do 
not have the resources, or political connections, to invest in their land.

He hopes that as Zimbabwe's economy slowly recovers under a power-sharing 
government, a new programme can be worked out which would give these people the 
backing they need to succeed.

It is often argued that large-scale commercial farming - as many of the white 
Zimbabweans used to practise - is inherently more efficient than the 
smallholder 
system which replaced it, but Mr Scoones dismisses this argument and says he is 
backed by several studies from around the world.

He says it is now impossible to return to the previous set-up and even suggests 
that some of the evicted white farmers may one day work with the new farmers as 
consultants, marketing men, farm managers or elsewhere in the overall 
agricultural economy, such as transporting goods to market or helping to 
transform and add value to their produce.

Many of those who remain bitter about losing their land may are likely to 
respond: "Over my dead body".

But Mr Scoones says a surprising number are already taking this option and 
making reasonable money from it "under the radar".


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