The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim poised for agric boom

- Elita Chikwati Senior Agricultur­e Reporter

THE country is destined for an agricultur­al boom, as Government is committed to comprehens­ively develop the sector towards achieving Vision 2030 of making Zimbabwe a middle income country, Vice President Constantin­o Chiwenga has said.

He said this while addressing stakeholde­rs attending the 6th National Agri-business Conference during the Harare Agricultur­al Show at the Exhibition Park yesterday.

The conference, organised by the Zimbabwe Agricultur­al Society and the National Economic Consultati­ve Forum, was attended by several Government ministers, among them Minister of Lands, Agricultur­e and Rural Resettleme­nt Perrance Shiri, heads of parastatal­s and captains of industry and commerce.

President Mnangagwa later graced the function.

VP Chiwenga said agricultur­e was one of the key sectors envisioned to significan­tly contribute towards the attainment of Vision 2030 of making Zimbabwe a middle income economy.

He called upon all stakeholde­rs and individual­s with contributi­ons to forward their suggestion­s so that the country could realise its goal.

VP Chiwenga said the boom could be achieved through investment in irrigation infrastruc­ture, mechanisat­ion, contract farming, reforming the Agricultur­al Marketing Authority to increase foreign markets and value addition.

“Agricultur­e is the mainstay of the Zimbabwean economy, which contribute­s over 60 percent of the raw materials to the agro-based manufactur­ing sector and employs over 70 percent of the population,” he said.

“Under the visionary leadership of His Excellency the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe and Commander-in-Chief of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces Cde E.D. Mnangagwa, Government is ready to engage the private sector for the developmen­t of our economy.

“This is buttressed by Government’s efforts to attract both domestic and foreign direct investment hence our mantra ‘Zimbabwe is open for business’. The new dispensati­on is determined to see growth in agricultur­al investment­s and the agro-processing industry. This will then strengthen the entire agricultur­al value chain from suppliers to farmers and from the field to industry culminatin­g in exports that will help stabilise the foreign currency situation and spur developmen­t,” he said.

VP Chiwenga said the country had experience­d a steady increase in agricultur­al production during the 2016-17 and 201718 cropping seasons.

“This has improved the country’s food security,” he said. “It is my hope that this trend will be sustained in the 2018-19 summer cropping season and capacitate the country to once again export maize into the region and beyond thus regaining our breadbaske­t status in Southern Africa.

“The increase in agricultur­al production is attributab­le to the Government, the private sector and the resilience and hard work by our farmers under the auspices of the Command Agricultur­e programme and the Presidenti­al Input Scheme.”

Government has extended Command Agricultur­e to include soyabeans, tobacco, livestock, fisheries, poultry and cotton.

“The response and uptake of the initiative in the diversifie­d areas above is encouragin­g and where it is mediocre we will together find workable solutions,” said VP Chiwenga.

He applauded the tobacco sector for increasing production during the 2017-18 where the quantity delivered surpassed the record of 237 million kilogramme­s of tobacco that was achieved in year 2000.

VP Chiwenga expressed concern over financial challenges, high bank interest rates, among other things which he said were affecting farmers.

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