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.***

Point-of-output subsidy will boost farming

Point-of-output subsidy will boost farming

http://www.theindependent.co.zw/

Thursday, 03 May 2012 16:15

Taurai Chinyamakobvu

AS Zimbabwe faces hunger and possible starvation due to massive grain 
shortages this farming season, there is need to reflect and change the 
present agricultural subsidy model to boost production and food security.

For as long as I can remember, the Zimbabwean government has been giving 
inputs to farmers. These inputs have been provided in various ways, in some 
cases as loans to both commercial and communal farmers, while in some 
instances as hand-outs for political expediency.

Either way, they are subsidies to farmers. In most of those cases, 
especially where they have been provided as loans, many of the farmers have 
never paid back. This has created a dependence disease in our farmers which 
is a threat to the country’s economic well-being and food security. They say 
that insanity is doing things the same way and expecting a different result!

If we don’t change the way agriculture is subsidised in Zimbabwe, we will 
continue to have an underperforming agricultural sector. My submission here 
is not that we should stop agricultural subsidies. Many countries including 
Japan, China and the United States subsidise farmers. Rather, the present 
subsidy model needs to be changed.

Before going into detail, there is a need to address two critical myths 
peddled in Zimbabwe for a long time. Correcting those myths is important in 
locating the role and importance of agriculture in the greater economic 
sphere.

The first myth that has been peddled for a long time locally and 
internationally is that Zimbabwe, until the land reform which started in 
2000, was the breadbasket of Africa. This myth can be traced back to the 
role that Zimbabwe was assigned at the formation of the Southern African 
Development Coordination Conference (Sadcc), now known as Sadc, way back in 
April 1980 in Lusaka, Zambia.

At that time, countries were assigned specific responsibilities which 
related to their natural endowments and assumed future strengths. For 
example, Malawi was assigned responsibilities over fisheries and wildlife, 
and Zambia was assigned a role over mining. While it is true Zimbabwe had 
agricultural surpluses for certain crops at the time, it is a fact apartheid 
South Africa, which was not a part of Sadcc, produced by far more food, 
including maize and wheat among other agricultural products, than Zimbabwe.

The second myth holds that land is the economy and the economy is the land. 
Promoting that myth has political benefits in our country where the majority 
of our folks are either poor or subsistence farmers or both. However, making 
our people hold such beliefs is neither visionary nor useful. Our people 
certainly need development, and we can only transform from a Third World 
country to a developed one if we industrialise, and doing so means we should 
transform our ability to produce goods and services through building key 
skills and technologies.

No economy in this world had developed on the basis of agriculture. This is 
not to say agriculture is not important. But the importance we have given it 
in Zimbabwe is only good enough if our vision is to remain a Third World 
country.

Coming back to the agricultural subsidy issue, subsidies to farmers are 
provided in many countries, including the two richest countries, the US and 
Japan. The only country that has eliminated all subsidies to farmers is New 
Zealand. So indeed to promote agriculture, it may be necessary for 
governments to continue subsidies. However, what should change is the model 
in use.

The current model in Zimbabwe has not been very helpful to the economy. It 
has created the farmer-subsidy-dependence syndrome. This disease has become 
so pervasive as to become chronic and destructive to our ability as a 
country to run farms as enterprises. Our government has given farmers 
everything over the years mostly for free — diesel, scotch-carts, tractors, 
trailers, ploughs, wheelbarrows, irrigation pipes, combine harvesters, seed, 
and fertiliser, among a host of other inputs. Yet every year, there are 
reports of abuse of those inputs.

The media has even reported of some recipients of tractors using them to 
transport commuters. In spite of this investment over several years, it has 
become normal to hear farmers whining that the government has not given them 
inputs at the beginning of every rainy season.

For Zimbabwe to develop, full and efficient utilisation of the land is 
important, and we can only get to that stage if the current crop of farmers 
starts looking at farming as an enterprise. This should be applicable to 
both commercial and rural farmers. To achieve that, the subsidy model needs 
to change. The solution to that needs to look at the farming value chain or 
the farming process. The present model subsidises farmers at the input 
level. This is populist and works well for politicians, but encourages 
laziness and abuse of the inputs.

So how else can we subsidise our farmers in a way that reduces abuse, 
encourages production and transforms agriculture? We must incentivise output 
rather than give inputs. Subsidies should be moved from the point of inputs 
to the point of outputs. That way, farmers get rewarded for what they have 
produced and not for what they are yet to produce.

Government needs to channel the subsidies to the point of sale. When a 
farmer, for example produces wheat, the government can top up a certain 
amount on the price per tonne delivered. That would incentivise production. 
It will enable the government to channel those subsidies to specific crops 
whose output it plans to stimulate.

This concept is not entirely new. The Reserve Bank used to do it for tobacco 
in the past. But that’s not adequate because it left out the non-tobacco 
producing farmers.

The biggest advantage of going this route is that it weans the system from 
carrying and supporting unproductive farmers and inputs abusers. It also 
stimulates production as there is a monetary incentive for increased output. 
More importantly, our farmers need to understand farming should be run as an 
enterprise at whatever scale.

Some might argue this model will leave out start-up farmers who do not have 
resources. That is mitigated by the role of contract farming. If a farmer 
has land but no capital for inputs, then he should go the contract farming 
route.

If we keep on doing the same thing and expecting different results, then we 
are insane.

Chinyamakobvu is a Japan-based scholar and analyst. Email: 
[email protected] .

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