Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

***The views expressed in the articles published on this website DO NOT necessarily express the views of the Commercial Farmers' Union.***

Next Africa: Zimbabwe’s Farming Boom Masks 20 Wasted Years

Next Africa: Zimbabwe’s Farming Boom Masks 20 Wasted Years

Two decades after Robert Mugabe drove White farmers off their land, Zimbabwe’s agricultural sector is booming.

Source: Next Africa: Zimbabwe’s Farming Boom Masks 20 Wasted Years – The Zimbabwean

The people tending the crops are, again, mostly White farmers.

Today, the fertile land around the capital, Harare, is dotted with expensive irrigation equipment and wheat, corn and tobacco production is soaring, while a nascent blueberry industry is earning precious foreign currency.

The government’s own targets see soybean output more than tripling this season and the crucial tobacco crop jumping 75%.

In reality, it has failed.

Zimbabwean farming is dominated by large companies such as British American Tobacco and Innscor Africa that hire growers to produce on their behalf on a commercial scale.

Without the skills or the capital to cultivate effectively, those who do farm themselves sell on a small scale to the companies, and complain they barely make ends meet.

While Mugabe’s program may have been politically expedient, it pushed the economy into decline and destroyed industries. Ultimately it’s done little to rectify the historical wrongs he said justified the sometimes fatal attacks that accompanied the seizures and made the country an international pariah.

— By Antony Sguazzin

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