Land Reform. How Successful?
The success or otherwise of land resettlement in Zimbabwe cannot be judged by how many people are on the land now, but by what is produced, what incomes are earned and whether the economy as a whole benefitted. Joseph Hanlon - an apologist for Zanu-PF's chaotic politically-driven land programme - is either unaware of, or ignores, this crucial point.
It is just one of numerous flaws in his article in which he works hard to avoid confusing his readers with the facts on output, productivity, imports and their macroeconomic implications. In 2000 - the year in which the Fast Track Land Reform (FTLR) took off, Zimbabwe farms produced 3.7 million tonnes of output (excluding estate-grown sugar)). In 2012, the Ministry of Finance estimated output at less than half that (1.7 million tonnes) and just two months ago, the government estimated a 20% fall in plantings for the 2013 season that will translate into lower output this year.
Food and livestock production (excluding beef) collapsed from three million tonnes in 2000 to 1.3 million tonnes 12 years later, with cereal output down 55 percent at 1.1 million tonnes. The country that consumes over two million tonnes of cereals a year and that, prior to land resettlement, was largely self-sufficient in foodstuffs and a substantial exporter of farm produce, now imports some $650 million of food a year, increasing to $731 million in 2012 or 11 percent of total imports.
Understandably given that he is writing a party-political polemic, not serious journalism, Hanlon fails to mention these inconvenient truths preferring to focus on some extremely dubious employment and farm occupation data. According to Hanlon "white farmers" employed "about 250 000" workers. In fact, employment on formal sector farms (as distinct from "white" farms, whatever a "white" farm was) peaked in 1997 at over 350 000 workers and averaged over 330 000 a year right through the 1990s. Such clumsy disregard for the facts typifies his approach.
The latest annual figure (2010) shows a total formal farming sector figure of 388 000 - the bulk of whom (287 000) were employed on resettled farms. A further 101 000 were employed on large scale commercial farms, or in Hanlon's racist terminology "white" farms. In fact, these are not "white" farms at all, but properties owned by the state, by local and foreign corporates and by Zimbabweans of all races.