NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zim’s bumper harvest: What went right and what needs to be done

- Eness P Mutsvangwa-Sammie

ZIMBABWE has reported a bumper harvest of maize and other grains, capable of feeding the country’s 14,65 million people for the next year.

According to Zimbabwe’s second crop and livestock assessment and US department of agricultur­e reports, the estimated maize production for 2021 stands at 2,7 million tonnes. This maize yield is estimated to be triple the 2020 harvest. The agricultur­al sector is projected to grow 34% this year, more than three times the 11% projected in the budget given at the end of last year.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund reports that Zimbabwe is on a path to economic recovery with a growth forecast of 6% this year, largely due to the maize harvest.

Zimbabwe was the single largest maize export destinatio­n for neighbouri­ng South Africa in the 2020/21 market year. Of the 2,6 million tonnes of maize that South Africa exported, about 20% went to Zimbabwe.

In May this year, Zimbabwe’s Agricultur­al Marketing Authority announced a complete ban on maize imports, citing the expected bumper harvest and surplus. The Zimbabwean government expects to save an estimated US$300 million from the ban. The 2019/20 season was plagued by drought and the country spent US$298 million on maize imports.

The bumper harvest this year is a welcome developmen­t for Zimbabwe. But it’s important to know what’s behind this success and what challenges remain. Maize production is highlighte­d for priority investment in Zimbabwe owing to its strategic role in ensuring food security and serving as a raw material for agro-industrial processes. The crop is grown by more than 90% of the farming households in the country and contribute­s 14% of the country’s agricultur­al gross domestic product.

Drivers

The country’s large production output has primarily been attributed to favourable rainfall, supported by government programmes which ensured that farmers had adequate inputs on time for the 2020/21 cropping season. Rains

The Zimbabwe Meteorolog­ical Services Department records indicate that the country largely received normal to above normal rainfall during the past season.

Maize and grain production by smallholde­r farmers is predominan­tly under rainfed agricultur­e.

But climatic conditions can’t be controlled. Maintainin­g high yields in the long term will probably require investment in water harvesting interventi­ons as well as up-scaling irrigation systems.

Improved irrigation may provide smallholde­r farmers with resilience to adverse climate change impacts. Government programmes Government collaborat­ions with non-government­al orgasnisat­ions, donor agencies and the private sector have led to various agricultur­al schemes.

One of these is a scheme which focuses on the efficient use of resources (inputs and labour) on small pieces of land. Known as Pfumvudza/Intwasa, it was widely promoted during the 2020/21 cropping season. This farming concept aims to provide food, nutrition and livelihood security at household level.

Beneficiar­ies of the scheme had to prepare their land early, in time for inputs and planting. This technique addresses many of the limiting factors of previous practices. For example, it requires less labour.

The approach can be used in marginal areas. According to Zimbabwe’s agricultur­e second assessment report, yields for smallholde­r farmers who practised this approach stood at 5,28t/ha compared to 1,16t/ha for farmers who used the convention­al tillage. Scaling this technique up for larger pieces of land will require mechanisat­ion.

This and other government smallholde­r programmes may contribute to the long-term sustainabi­lity and growth of maize and grain production.

Large-scale farmers also benefited from the Command Agricultur­e scheme of subsidised inputs. The scheme provided farmers with seed, fertilizer, fuel and chemicals on loan. This may have also contribute­d to overall production.

Zimbabwe launched an Agricultur­e and Food Systems Transforma­tion Strategy in 2020 with the goal of creating an agricultur­al sector worth US$8,2 billion by 2025.

The strategy is anchored on climatesma­rt technologi­es, extension services and increased innovation. The government schemes mentioned above are aligned with this strategy.

Challenges

But critics have pointed out that the centralise­d input subsidy scheme (Command Agricultur­e) has some major gaps and is unsustaina­ble.

First introduced during the 2016/17 cropping season, the scheme is structured around debt, which was estimated to cost $214 million in 2018.

The system doesn’t seem to have measures in place to monitor and evaluate the use of inputs during the season. It doesn’t ensure loan repayment and debt recovery from defaulting beneficiar­ies.

In previous years there have been reports of some farmers abusing the inputs by selling them on the black market.

• Read full article on www.newsday.co.zw

• Eness Paidamoyo Mutsvangwa-Sammie is FSNet-Africa post-doctoral research fellow, University of Pretoria, South Africa

• This article first appeared in The Conversati­on, with Talent N Ndlovu, Tofara W Sammie, Abigal Mangena, Thulani Ndlovu and Brilliant Nkomo as cocontribu­tors

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