Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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For Zimbabwe, reviving agriculture is the only way out

For Zimbabwe, reviving agriculture is the only way out

http://indepthafrica.com

Posted On : November 3rd, 2012

Agricultural revival in Zimbabwe is the trigger for creating a virtuous 
cycle of wealth creation not only in Zimbabwe, but in the SADC region as a 
whole.

Let me begin by beseeching my patient readers to forgive me for a rather 
longish article. The subject matter herein is of national importance and 
security. It therefore requires that I dispatch my thoughts on it in one 
sitting for your benefit. Kindly tolerate my indulgence.

It is unbelievable when you begin to appreciate the opportunity in and the 
potential of Zimbabwe’s agricultural sector. I say opportunity because, you 
simply cannot imagine the value which we are currently sitting on, and how 
quickly we can correct the prodigious blunders of ZANU (PF). The unintended 
consequences of past actions based anger and political expediency, like a 
nightmare, continue to linger in our brains and truly arrest the potential 
of our country. It’s time to be proactive.

Zimbabwe has about 15 million hectares of arable agricultural land, of which 
an estimated 4 million was bought by serious black farmers, on a willing 
buyer willing seller basis before 2000. Around 11 million hectares, 
currently sit under the control of our government as a dead asset. Yes, a 
dead asset, because that land has no commercial value to anyone whatsoever.

This is simply because; we do not have a land tenure act that allows 
occupiers of that land to hold unencumbered title and use that as collateral 
to borrow funds for working capital. The government has the sole discretion, 
on who can stay on that that land and you can lose it “at the discretion of 
the minister”. This applies whether you have a permit, or an offer letter 
for any piece of agricultural land in Zimbabwe. The obvious effect of this 
is that, nobody in their right mind is going to further develop that land, 
nor is any bank going to lend anyone money to farm on it. Around USD10 
billon or more of value, sits on the country’s balance sheet, dormant and 
unrealizable.

Now let me put it simply, imagine you have a title deed to the land on which 
you have built your house, and the state walks in and says; “Hey this land 
does not belong to you anymore so move off but don’t worry, we will pay you 
for the developments that you have done in the future at a value which we 
deem fit. Unfortunately we don’t have the money now, so you are going to 
have to wait.” Of course, this is regardless how you may have acquired that 
land in the first place or, and in the case of farm land, whether you had 
made some improvements or are just about to harvest a crop that you invested 
your lifetime savings in or borrowed funds to do so. Overnight you are 
evicted and, you are worth zero. Now that is traumatic. Isn’t it?

If you had borrowed money from the bank to build your house, to make 
improvements or to buy inputs, it would mean that the bank that lent you 
that money ends up with nothing and you too end up with nothing plus 
incredible stress. Now you tell me which bank, local, indigenous or 
international, would lend money to anyone who is in farming? What framer 
would continue to invest his time and money in such a situation? The 
consequences are that; in 2000, the financial sector had around USD2 billion 
invested in the agricultural sector, compared to a mere USD100 million in 
2010. In addition, real GDP fell 40% from $6.6 billion in 2000 to $4.1 
billion in 2010. It is estimated that about 2 million families employed in 
the sector lost their jobs and livelihoods. Surprised?

Further imagine that, you are an international or local investor, who is 
looking for an opportunity to invest in; would you invest in property or any 
asset in a country like that? Would you also consider investing in a country 
where companies are being taken over in almost the same manner, without even 
the new owners paying fair value or having the competence to manage and grow 
the company? You would not only be insane but downright stupid to do so.

The sacrosanct cornerstone of free and profitable enterprise upon which any 
successful economy is built namely; the legal protection of private property 
ownership has been disregarded to our extreme prejudice. That is our 
fundamental problem.

For the benefit of my black South African brothers and sisters, who are now 
baying for the same “Zimbabwe solution” and taking over what’s “rightfully 
theirs”, let the inevitable consequences of their aspirations be evident 
herein;

Investors will move out or go elsewhere, land and property values will 
collapse and the economy will experience a serious contraction. Industries 
will close, unemployment will increase and liquidity will dry up while 
inflation will increase, especially if the country decides to print money 
since it can no longer borrow from any bank anywhere. Any individual with 
any savings or investment will be ruined, as happened to millions of 
pensioners, insurance policyholders, asset managers, currency speculators 
and others. The banking sector will collapse as loans to the agricultural 
sector become unrecoverable. The impact is catastrophic. Overnight, we 
wiped off billions of US dollars of value from the country’s balance sheet, 
and caused unprecedented trauma to every Zimbabwean, black and white.

These inescapable interrelated consequences are NOT as a result of sanctions 
or a devious conspiracy by the West. They are the workings of simple 
economics 101 ignored. We created our own spider’ web and remain caught in 
it up to today.

I am reliably told that, before 2000, for every USD1 invested in agriculture 
in Zimbabwe, USD3 was invested in related and downstream industry. Meaning 
that; the potential “multiplier or knock-on effects” on the economy of 
investing in a stable and viable agricultural sector, underpinned by a land 
tenure act that respects private property have since disappeared to our 
disadvantage.

Let me be very honest: without correcting the devastating past mistakes ZANU 
(PF) with regard to land ownership redistribution (to use a civilized term) 
and now indigenization of private companies, our economy will never recover. 
That is the inconvenient truth that we must all accept regardless of the 
color of our skin or political leanings.

For the benefit of my tolerant readers and detractors alike, please note 
that, I am neither supporting the racially skewed ownership of land which we 
inherited at independence, nor am I disrespecting the purpose of the armed 
struggle and the sacrifices made by all during that time. I certainly do not 
support the skewed ownership of land by black Zimbabweans, where a select 
few pick and choose multiple lucrative land assets because they are ZANU 
(PF) praise singers. Especially where there is no demonstrable evidence of 
their ability or a keen interest to use that land to the benefit of the 
country and ensure our food security and employment creation.

Believe me, I agree with Mugabe on his principle that ALL black Zimbabweans 
must own and manage a majority stake of agricultural, mineral and industrial 
assets. The problem is the methodology being applied to achieve that 
objective and the hyenas and vultures that are circling around him.

The solution to our land ownership conundrum for me is very straightforward. 
We must revive these dead assets first, by ascertaining their fair value 
through a land audit and compensating the holders of the title deeds for the 
improvements they did on the land. This must be independently ascertained 
and if necessary, arbitrated upon. That is the right thing to do, despite 
our anger and the harshness of our colonial history.

Second, we must then fund the “ownership” of this land by new black farmers, 
who are committed and experienced, and who comprehend that farming is 
neither a part time national hobby nor is it about boasting on how many 
farms you have in a pub conversation. Third, we must create value by having 
a land tenure act that allows the new farmers to borrow against the land 
they occupy. Lastly, we must capacitate the new farmers, and draw the 
expertise of experienced white and black farmers, so that we can accelerate 
the productive capability of this dead asset, within the shortest possible 
time.

There are billions of funds awaiting their entry into Zimbabwe and all they 
need is our serious attention to the above matters. We must take 
responsibility and all work hard towards creating a stable and democratic 
political environment.

If we do that, we would have suddenly created value on the country’s balance 
sheet and we will certainly see international financiers coming back. 
Property and asset values will increase (including commercial and 
residential property.) This would mean that we can further create access to 
new credit for all property owners, related industries and then some.

Our industry, which is hugely dependent on agriculture, will begin to 
recover; employment will improve so will liquidity and therefore, disposable 
incomes in the economy. On top of that, Zimbabwean blacks will now own a 
significant and productive portion of the economy in agriculture and related 
sectors. We will be able to feed ourselves and the region once again. We 
would have triggered a “virtuous cycle of wealth creation” to the benefit of 
not only Zimbabweans, but the SADC region as a whole.

Agriculture is therefore the “red button”, for re-launching the Zimbabwean 
economy into the stratosphere.

Interestingly enough, I explained this to my fourteen year old son the other 
day and he simply said: “Wow dad, it sounds quite an obvious and simple 
solution, why isn’t it getting done?”

“From the crooked timber of humanity”, I answered him, “no straight thing 
was ever made.” (Quoting Immanuel Kant, the German philosopher)

In conclusion, I must also quote Albert Einstein, as I often do, that “The 
significant problems we face can not be solved at the same level of thinking 
we were at when we created them.”

Pray, somebody out there; are you hearing what I am saying?

Vince Musewe is an independent economist currently in Harare. You may 
contact him on [email protected]

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