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Moving forward in Zimbabwe - Brooks World Poverty Institute - The ...

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<strong>Mov<strong>in</strong>g</strong> <strong>forward</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Zimbabwe</strong><br />

Reduc<strong>in</strong>g poverty and promot<strong>in</strong>g growth<br />

the economic m<strong>in</strong>istries and the political leadership who wanted<br />

radical agrarian reforms to appease the peasantry would resurface<br />

aga<strong>in</strong> towards the 2000 elections with dramatic consequences. Early<br />

dom<strong>in</strong>ance of technocrats <strong>in</strong> the resettlement programme helped<br />

limit the active cultivation of a system of political patronage based<br />

on access to land. If an asymmetrical patrimonial relationship<br />

existed at all, this was skewed <strong>in</strong> favour of the peasant communities<br />

which dur<strong>in</strong>g early <strong>in</strong>dependence showed broad disregard for the<br />

bureaucracy and the political elite alike (Kriger, 1992). Four models<br />

were adopted for implementation. Table 3.4 gives an outl<strong>in</strong>e of<br />

the ma<strong>in</strong> features of the models and the number of households<br />

resettled by 1998.<br />

As Table 3.4 shows, the majority of beneficiaries were resettled<br />

<strong>in</strong> Model A schemes that emphasised <strong>in</strong>dividual smallholder<br />

agriculture. M<strong>in</strong>imum <strong>in</strong>frastructure and service standards were<br />

also set for these settlement models. A borehole was planned for<br />

each village of 20-25 households. A cl<strong>in</strong>ic was planned for every<br />

500 families, while a primary school classroom and a teacher’s<br />

house were envisaged for every 20 families. Further, each herd<br />

of 1,400 cattle was to be provided with a dip tank. It was also<br />

envisaged that it would be feasible to effect physical separation<br />

between each resettlement scheme and surround<strong>in</strong>g communal<br />

areas through the use of fenc<strong>in</strong>g. With<strong>in</strong> each resettlement scheme,<br />

fences would also separate residential, graz<strong>in</strong>g and arable land use<br />

zones. <strong>The</strong> state planned to spend about Z$3,086 (the equivalent of<br />

about US$12,000 <strong>in</strong> 2008 dollars) <strong>in</strong> resettl<strong>in</strong>g each of the 162,000<br />

households planned (Government of <strong>Zimbabwe</strong> 1982b). At the<br />

time (<strong>in</strong> 1981) planners set an annual <strong>in</strong>come target of Z$400<br />

(about US$1,420 <strong>in</strong> 2008 dollars) for each settler household. This<br />

was double the <strong>in</strong>comes obta<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> the communal land areas at<br />

the time.<br />

3.9 Land reform and resettlement December<br />

1992-2000<br />

Several key policy developments make this a def<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g decade <strong>in</strong><br />

land resettlement <strong>in</strong> <strong>Zimbabwe</strong>. <strong>The</strong> first was the <strong>in</strong>troduction of a<br />

programme of economic reform launched <strong>in</strong> 1990. <strong>The</strong> ESAP of<br />

1991-1995 was launched to make the economy more ‘competitive<br />

and productive’ by ‘mov<strong>in</strong>g away from a highly regulated economy<br />

to one where free market forces are allowed to play a more decisive<br />

role’ (GoZ, 1990). This was a significant shift <strong>in</strong> economic policy and<br />

put an end to the socialist rhetoric of the 1980s. Key components<br />

of the programme relat<strong>in</strong>g to agriculture concerned deregulation<br />

of agricultural prices and market<strong>in</strong>g. It was hoped this and other<br />

measures elsewhere <strong>in</strong> the economy would yield agricultural growth<br />

of 3.2 per cent a year. For the land resettlement programme,<br />

however, agreement was reached at the Paris Donors meet<strong>in</strong>g which<br />

agreed on the ESAP aid package, that extra-judicial approaches to<br />

property redistribution would have to be renounced. This meant<br />

that outright seizure of land would not be possible under the new<br />

dispensation. <strong>The</strong> Second Five Year National Development Plan<br />

published <strong>in</strong> December 1991 also marked this shift, ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g<br />

that: ‘… land redistribution and resettlement programmes are not<br />

last<strong>in</strong>g solutions for over-population problems <strong>in</strong> the communal<br />

areas’ (GoZ, 1991). This represented a significant shift <strong>in</strong> the<br />

conceptualisation of land resettlement. It was announced that the<br />

emphasis would now be on ‘communal reorganisation, population<br />

plann<strong>in</strong>g and establishment of agro-<strong>in</strong>dustries and other off farm<br />

activities’ (GoZ, 1991).<br />

Although under ESAP the need for land reform was<br />

acknowledged, it was stated that ‘the large scale commercial farm<strong>in</strong>g<br />

sector is of critical economic importance and will cont<strong>in</strong>ue to be<br />

one of the pillars of economic growth’ (Government of <strong>Zimbabwe</strong><br />

1990). <strong>The</strong> programme therefore advocated for a market-based<br />

mechanism of transferr<strong>in</strong>g land, and more focus on re-organis<strong>in</strong>g<br />

production <strong>in</strong> communal areas. By the time ESAP was <strong>in</strong>itiated, the<br />

land resettlement programme had been ongo<strong>in</strong>g for ten years and<br />

had missed most of its targets, resettl<strong>in</strong>g only 52,000 households by<br />

1991 aga<strong>in</strong>st a target of 162,000 households. As Table 3.5 shows,<br />

the amount of land available was fall<strong>in</strong>g over the years and there<br />

was a correspond<strong>in</strong>g decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> the average number of households<br />

resettled per year between 1985 and 1997.<br />

Several other factors apart from ESAP can help to expla<strong>in</strong><br />

the decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> the amount of land and the number of households<br />

resettled. <strong>The</strong> First Five Year National Development Plan (1986-<br />

1990) published <strong>in</strong> April 1986 had identified dw<strong>in</strong>dl<strong>in</strong>g f<strong>in</strong>ancial<br />

resources for land purchase, along with drought. In addition<br />

there was less land on the market, largely because those farmers<br />

who had wanted to sell off their land had done so. Although<br />

the state attempted to get more land available on the market by<br />

<strong>in</strong>troduc<strong>in</strong>g the Land Acquisition Act <strong>in</strong> 1986 to give it the right<br />

of first refusal <strong>in</strong> all rural land transactions, not much land became<br />

available as a result (Moyo, 1995). Donor funds had all but dried<br />

up. Although the promised grant from the UK government had<br />

not yet been exhausted, there was an unannounced policy shift<br />

<strong>in</strong> the UK government <strong>in</strong> the late 1980s. <strong>The</strong> th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g was that<br />

resettlement was expensive and was benefit<strong>in</strong>g fewer people<br />

(Cusworth, 2000). It was felt that more could be achieved through<br />

donor aid by focus<strong>in</strong>g on the communal lands which were still<br />

home to the majority. In addition, some <strong>in</strong>ternal shortcom<strong>in</strong>gs<br />

<strong>in</strong> the programme were identified, especially a lack of capacity<br />

to implement the programme follow<strong>in</strong>g the disbandment of the<br />

then Department for Rural Development and its merger with the<br />

District Development Fund. Further, there was a perception that<br />

Table 3.5: Land acquired for resettlement and households resettled, 1980-1997.<br />

Period<br />

Land acquired<br />

(ha)<br />

Households<br />

resettled<br />

Land acquired<br />

Average per year<br />

People resettled<br />

1980-1984 2,147,855 28,568 429,571 5,714<br />

1985-1990 447,791 19,110 74,632 3,822<br />

1991-1997 789,645 23,322 157,929 3,332<br />

Total 3,385,291 71,000 211,581 4,438<br />

Source: GoZ, 1998c: 11; GoZ, 1993a.<br />

45

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