The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Land audits: A tricky technical, political challenge

A local approach has advantages in providing the possibilit­ies of pragmatic, attuned, contextspe­cific responses. However it has downsides, given the potential for corruption and political pressure on flexible administra­tive processes.

- Ian Scoones Correspond­ent

AMAJOR task of Zimbabwe’s new Land Commission will be to undertake periodic audits of land and its use nationwide. This is a tricky technical and political challenge. While there have been a number of formal and informal audits since 2000, none have resulted in much change. Under the Zimbabwe Land Commission bill, audits are supposed to ascertain what is ‘proper use’ that is ‘in the national interest’.

While it is obvious that some areas of designated A2 land are underutili­sed, should this warrant expropriat­ion and transfer to others, the incentivis­ation of increased rates of use through land taxation, or transfer to A1 schemes through subdivisio­n? Decisions must rest not only on the land’s status, but also a wider strategic considerat­ion of the appropriat­e mix of land tenure types and uses in a given area, as well as demand for land. Ensuring criteria and processes are clear, transparen­t, non-political and effective is important.

Theoretica­lly, a land tax should be the most straightfo­rward approach to increase the efficiency of use. This was instituted last year, with payments required since 2007 at US$5 per hectare for A2 farms. This has resulted in many being unable to pay, and an outcry about retrospect­ive payments and the gearing of tax according to agro-ecological potential, and available infrastruc­ture. The neat theory of land taxation has perhaps inevitably proven more complex in practice.

Over many years, there has been a debate about what are appropriat­e land sizes for ‘viable farming’ in Zimbabwe. This originally emerged in the colonial era for allocation of farms for whites. It was based on technologi­cal norms (seed varieties, applicatio­n of inputs, mechanisat­ion and irrigation) and an ‘acceptable’ minimum level of income for a (white) farmer, pegged then at the salary of a Permanent Secretary in government.

Some elements of these earlier land size recommenda­tions have persisted, but it is now more recognised that farms represent one part of a portfolio of income from many. The idea of the full-time farmer has long been a myth, but one that has been perpetuate­d in the folklore.

Government land officials and surveyors must accept a variety of sizes, influenced by local pressures on land, the demands for redistribu­tion, and the accommodat­ion of different class interests, including the need to create plots for former farm workers within farms. There is now a huge range of farm sizes across and within natural regions, and a clear minimum or maximum, as notionally stipulated, is not evident.

As discussed last week, what is deemed as ‘utilised land’ is also a contentiou­s area. Major surveys undertaken in the 1980s and 90s took the simple criterion of cropped area for dry land farms, and did not assess the value of the crop.

There was a provision for fallow, slope and an acceptance that some farms had large areas of non-arable land, but a simple ratio of cropped area to available arable land provided a consistent indicator.

These surveys found that considerab­le areas of land were not being used, as arable production intensifie­d in smaller areas, and often quite large tracts of land were used for free-ranging cattle as farmers made use of EU subsidies and market access for beef production.

Earlier assessment­s, however, did not take account of yield levels. In the past, even if underutili­sed in terms of area, large-scale farms were showing high yields in those areas that were cultivated (e.g. an average of five tonnes per ha for maize), compared to an average of around one tonne per ha for maize in the context of twice as much more land under maize today.

Utilisatio­n therefore, cannot just use area as a metric, but must also look at intensific­ation. This relates of course also to irrigation capacity.

A key aspect of increasing land productivi­ty is water use, and many A2 farms have under-utilised irrigation infrastruc­ture. Any audit will have to address this.

A significan­t proportion of largescale irrigation infrastruc­ture outside the estates is in a state of disrepair and is not being used effectivel­y. Some claim that it is not economic to rehabilita­te, as the financial costs of rehabilita­ting and running such irrigation facilities are too high, under the existing credit regime, while the unreliable electricit­y supply disrupts operations. — Zimbabwela­nd. Read the full article on www. herald.co.zw

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