Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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Time to rethink large scale commercial agriculture

Time to rethink large scale commercial agriculture

http://www.thestandard.co.zw

September 30, 2012 in Opinion
There is a reticence among academics and social commentors in Zimbabwe to 
wholeheartedly endorse the principles and practice of large-scale commercial 
farming.Sunday View by Bruce Gemmill

This can, in large measure be attributed to a lingering belief that 
large-scale commercial farming was a colonial construction favouring whites. 
Denying black Zimbabweans the right to own land in areas designated 
commercial was driven by racist politics. This aberration does not in any 
way contaminate or detract from the proven superiority of combining freehold 
title with market-guided production.

Where large- scale commercial farming prevails, it is rare that food will be 
in short supply.

Nevertheless, there is a notion that a more egalitarian method of land 
holding should apply in Zimbabwe. This bias is understandable if one’s main 
concern is social equity. After all, can one justify creating a land-owning 
elite?

An attractive and easy argument to defend? If on the other hand, one’s main 
concern is to optimise agricultural production and conservation, then one is 
bound to support the notion that land is more productive and better looked 
after when held under freehold title and farmed commercially.

Food security is of rising concern on the agendas of many governments around 
the world. Surprisingly and alarmingly, the least concerned seem to be in 
Africa. Regionally, there is an estimated four million tonnes of maize 
deficit this year. When food gets scarce, prices rise automatically and the 
problem becomes twin-tracked, availability and affordability.

In the 1960s India was agriculturally backward and unable to feed its 
burgeoning population. Mass starvation was averted by initiatives led by 
Norman Borlaug an American agronomist, “the father of the Green Revolution”, 
credited with saving over a billion people from starvation.

He led to the development of high-yielding varieties of cereal grains, 
expansion of irrigation infrastructure, mordenisation of management 
techniques, distribution of hybridised seeds, synthetic fertilisers, 
herbicides and pesticides to farmers.

In the 1960s, rice yields were about two tonnes per hectare, but by the 
mid-1990s they had risen to six tonnes per hectare. In the 1960s, rice cost 
about US$550 per tonne, in 2001 rice cost under US$200 per tonne. India 
became a major exporter of rice.

We in Zimbabwe need to learn the lessons offered to us by the “Green 
Revolution”. For the past 10 years, Zimbabwe has relied on grain imports, 
either donated as aid or purchased on the world market.

This year our grain production falls short of the amount needed to feed 
ourselves; this is the 11th consecutive year we have not been able to feed 
ourselves. We are in a similar situation that India was in the 1960s, albeit 
at a reduced scale.

Time is not on our side, the food supply situation in Zimbabwe is precarious 
and getting worse. We can rescue ourselves. All that is required is the 
political will. Revive large-scale commercial farming in the still existing 
commercial farming areas and start the process of converting subsistence 
farming into small-scale commercial farming in the existing communal farming 
areas.

Hardliners say whites have no right to own land in Zimbabwe — racist 
politics intruding again. I am confident that when we have a democratic 
non-racist government, white farmers in partnership with black farmers will 
build a new, modern and prosperous agricultural industry.

It is perhaps worth recalling the memorable observation made by Deng 
Xiaoping, the Chinese communist party leader: “It doesn’t matter if a cat is 
a white cat or a black cat, if it catches mice, it is a good cat”

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