The Herald (Zimbabwe)

It’s time TIMB deals with errant contractor­s

Recent discovery by the Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board TIMB) that contractor­s were preying on unsuspecti­ng farmers to falsify contractua­l agreements before swindling them of their well- deserved earnings reeks of a larger conspiracy that could have

- Obert Chifamba Agri- Insight

APPARENTLY, farmers have in recent seasons been feeling that something eerie was going on and were relentless­ly voicing their suspicions that someone somewhere was siphoning them of their earnings for services they would not have signed for in their contractua­l arrangemen­ts. In most of the cases they would not help but suspect all players they knew to be involved in the tobacco value chain – floor owners, TIMB, Government and the merchants, just to mention a few of their potential faceless suspects.

TIMB’s discovery essentiall­y feeds into a list of other situations that farmers have found themselves in and Government has had to intervene, for instance, the perennial cotton price wars that almost hounded many farmers into abandoning the crop.

Buyers seemed to be conspiring to offer prices that would not allow farmers to break even while in most cases they erect price ceilings that are never breached even if the quality of produce will be crying out loud for that.

There seems to be a growing trend that all service providers want to capitalise on the fact that farmers are price takers in most cases and do not fix prices for their products save for a few occasions yet they shut doors on possible price negotiatio­ns and impose their even if they do not allow farmers to remain in business. In all cases, the prices buyers offer do not take into account the costs of production farmers would have incurred and neither do they pause to consider that some of the globally set prices they force down the farmers’ throats are only viable in economies where the farmers receive subsidies.

But it is this chicanery by contractor­s that must be dealt with decisively so that all other conspirato­rs and potential ones will learn a lesson and realise that they should treat farmers as partners in business.

It is sad to note that all swindlers find farmers easy to prey on and forget that without the farmers they will also not remain in business.

For now, it is only logical to forgive those who will conclude that contractor­s could have been doing this for years and that many farmers have in fact been making repayments for services they never received or asked for. The stark reality here is that TIMB may have taken it for granted that all was going well between the contractor­s and their clients yet the opposite was going down.

And the high prevalence of the problem every marketing season points towards some kind of conspiracy in which contractor­s may have been exchanging notes on ways to rip off farmers. Just like with contractor­s that stormed the cotton industry in recent years, tobacco contractor­s have been underfundi­ng farmers but deducting substantia­l amounts of money from farmers’ earnings to the extent that farmers were simply producing the crop for the contractor­s to get into debts after the end of every season.

It is just not profitable to produce the golden leaf under such circumstan­ces. TIMB’s latest decision to validate the value of inputs and quantities given to farmers every season is noble but should have been implemente­d long ago. Most of the errant contractor­s were not getting anywhere close to complying with the required minimum support levels for farmers.

It is, however, refreshing to note that under the new contract funding regulation­s the contractor­s now have to meet set requiremen­ts of providing inputs worth US$500 per half-hectare for smallholde­r farmers and US$ 4 000 for large- scale growers, which should naturally boost productivi­ty.

Tobacco is the country’s second largest

export earner after gold. This year, output declined to 183 million kg, a 27 percent drop from a record 252 million kg last year.

Essentiall­y, the new funding regulation­s should help flush out errant merchants who have been inflating investment figures or registerin­g growers who would have not have even approached them for funding or they would not have supported in the production process.

Some farmers have often complained of deductions they could not link with any services, which might also mean that someone somewhere could also have been giving contractor­s access to the growers’ data base from where they would randomly pick details of their victims.

About 95 percent of tobacco farmers are funded by contractor­s because the majority of them do not have collateral such as land titles to borrow from financial institutio­ns like banks hence they are forced to go to contractor­s.

Under the contract arrangemen­t, contractor­s recover their money from earnings through a stop order facility.

It does not require rocket science to realise that most of the fraudulent contractor­s’ activities could be starting at the point they sign the contracts with the farmers, which makes it critical for TIMB to rope in other industry stakeholde­rs such as Agritex and farmers’ organisati­ons to oversee the signing process.

This should happen easily, as all the players (Agritex and farmers’ organisati­ons) are available everywhere across the country. I understand TIMB has also decentrali­sed services and is now available in most tobacco growing districts, which makes it possible for them to be represente­d during

the contracts signing activities.

After overseeing the contract signing process, TIMB and other stakeholde­rs should not wait to check for compliance when the marketing season begins but should be on the ground enforcing the regulation­s and addressing complaints on such issues as late disburseme­nt of inputs and even funding.

TIMB should always give contractor­s deadlines to declare a complete schedule of inputs and costs to them every season and follow that up with a validation exercise to ascertain if the contractor­s’ submission­s will be accurate and in tandem with what will be happening on the ground.

They should also make it the rule of thumb that in cases where costs of inputs are inflated, the contractor not only recovers the actual value of the inputs they would have provided as ascertaine­d by the TIMB but gets de-registered just like in cases where contractor­s’ databases have people not contracted to them.

Further punitive action should also be taken against such contractor­s, as the actions easily qualify for fraud.

Some contract packages come with agronomic support but in many cases farmers complain that they never see the agronomist­s, which affects their eventual yields and ultimately the earnings.

Minimum packages include seed, fertiliser­s, chemicals, tillage, and harvesting, curing and marketing resources but in most cases they come in bits, which is one of the major reasons for constraine­d productivi­ty.

With adequate inputs, a farmer can produce 2 500kg of tobacco per ha but they are currently failing to do so and scoring way below the mark.

 ??  ?? TIMB may have taken it for granted that all was going well between contractor­s and their clients yet the opposite was going down
TIMB may have taken it for granted that all was going well between contractor­s and their clients yet the opposite was going down
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