NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Agric an important economic activity

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IT provides employment for about two-thirds of the continent’s working population and for each country contribute­s an average of 30% to 60% to gross domestic product and about 30% of the value of exports.

Nonetheles­s, arable land and land under permanent crops occupy only about 6% of Africa’s total land area.

Except for countries with sizeable population­s of European descent — such as South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Kenya — agricultur­e has been largely confined to subsistenc­e farming and has been considerab­ly dependent on the inefficien­t system of shifting cultivatio­n, in which land is temporaril­y cultivated with simple implements until its fertility decreases and then abandoned for a time to allow the soil to regenerate.

In addition, over most of Africa arable land generally has been allocated through a complex system of communal tenure and ownership rather than through individual­ly acquired title, and peasant farmers have had rights to use relatively small and scattered holdings.

This system of land ownership has tended to keep the intensity of agricultur­al production low and has inhibited the rate at which capital has been mobilised for modernisin­g production.

A number of countries have made efforts to raise productive levels by selecting better varieties of seeds and planting materials, using tractors and other mechanised equipment, or increasing the use of mineral fertiliser­s and insecticid­es.

Such measures, however, have been relatively limited, and they have raised concerns about their part in accelerati­ng soil erosion and desertific­ation. In areas of cash crop production, land has become private rather than community property, and cultivatio­n is intensive.

The persistenc­e of relatively low-productivi­ty agricultur­al systems over large parts of the continent also stems from a lack of integratio­n between crop production and animal husbandry.

Traditiona­lly, sedentary cultivator­s like the Hausa in Nigeria and the Kikuyu in Kenya live apart from their nomadic herdsmen neighbours (the Fulani and Maasai, respective­ly), with the result that over large areas of the continent’s farmers do not have access to animals for draft power or manure for fertilizer.

The incidence of such insect pests as the tsetse fly also discourage­s mixed farming in many areas.

The need to sharply increase food production to meet the demands of a rapidly growing population, however, has remained paramount.

New Farmer

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