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The Coming Revolution in Africa
by
G. Pascal Zachary
Untitled Document
The heat is deadening. After a morning picking cotton on the side of a hill, Souley Madi, wearing a
knock-off Nike T-shirt and thongs made from discarded tires, staggers
down a steep slope, a heavy bag of cotton bolls on his back. Reaching his
small compound 10 minutes later, he greets his two wives. The older one
nurses a baby while preparing a lunch of maize and cassava. The second
wife, visibly pregnant, rises from a seat under a shade tree, responding to
Madi’s instructions. He wants to impress his foreign visitor, so he
prepares to introduce his latest agro-business brainstorm.
Ducks.
A few words from Madi, and wife number two dashes out
of sight. When she reappears, some three dozen baby ducks waddle behind
her. Madi beams, scoops up a duck, then hands it to me. He asks me to guess
how much it will sell for at maturity.
I guess too low. Three dollars, Madi says. He is the
first to raise ducks in the parched village of Badjengo, in the far north
of Cameroon, about 45 minutes from the provincial capital of Garoua. Madi
is a shrewd risk taker. Despite the challenging climate of
Africa’s rain-sparse savanna belt, Madi’s ducks
thrive, thanks partly to the diligent care provided by his new wife.
Madi, who is 41, sells nearly all of the ducks he
raises, saving only a few for his family to eat. The birds are big sellers
around local holidays, when Cameroonians in Europe and the United States
send cash to relatives back home. Madi uses part of his duck
money—about $100—to buy inventory for a small grocery
store he maintains on the side of a main road. The store, a shack really,
is secured by a heavy Chinese-made padlock. When people want to
shop, they must first find Madi and coax him to open (he’s got too
few customers to justify an employee). From the sale of cotton, dry goods,
and the ducks, Madi has accumulated a cash hoard he hides in his sleeping
hut.
Having finished high school, Madi is better educated
than most of his fellow farmers, and he embodies an important rule in rural
Africa: The more educated the farmer, the more effective his practices and
the higher his income. Madi won’t allow his two school-age
children to skip class in favor of fieldwork. “They should study
instead,” he says.
Short and stocky, Madi sits down on a low wooden bench
and begins to eat roasted corn. He tells me through a translator how
he—a Muslim—took a second wife, not for
status or love, but to help him take advantage of the farm boom. He
complains that prices, especially for cotton, should be higher. Yet he says
he’s never had more money saved.
To Americans, bombarded
with dire images of Africa—starving Africans, diseased
Africans, Africans fleeing disasters or fleeing other Africans trying to
kill them—Madi may seem like a character from a novel. But
he is no fiction. Despite the horrors of Darfur, the persistence of
HIV/AIDS, and the failure to end famines and civil wars in a handful of
countries, the vast majority of sub-Saharan Africans neither live
in war zones nor struggle with an active disease or famine. Extreme poverty
is relatively rare in rural Africa, and there is a growing entrepreneurial
spirit among farmers that defies the usual image of Africans as passive
victims. They are foot soldiers in an agrarian revolution that never makes
the news. In 25 visits to the region since 2000, I have met many Souley
Madis, and have come to believe that they are the key to understanding
Africa’s present and reshaping its future.
After decades of mistreatment, abuse, and
exploitation, African farmers—still overwhelmingly
smallholders working family-tilled plots of land—are awakening
from a long slumber. Because farmers are the majority (about 60 percent) of
all sub-Saharan Africans, farming holds the key to reducing poverty and
helping to spread prosperity. Over the longer term, prosperous African
farmers could become the backbone of a social and political transformation.
They are the sort of canny and independent tillers of the land Thomas
Jefferson envisioned as the foundation for American democracy. In a region
where elites often seem more committed to enjoying the trappings of success
abroad than creating success at home, farmers have a real stake in
improving their turf. Life will still be hard for them, but in the
years ahead they can be expected to demand better government policies and
more effective services. As their incomes and aspirations rise, they could
someday even form their own political parties, in much the way that farmers
in the American Midwest and Western Europe did in the past. At a minimum,
African governments seem likely to increasingly promote trade and
development policies that advance rural interests.
Improved livelihoods for farmers alone won’t
reverse Africa’s marginalization in the global economy or solve the
region’s many vexing problems. But among people concerned about
Africa—and certainly among those in multinational organizations
who must grapple with humanitarian disasters on the
continent—the unfolding rural revival holds out new hope. Having once dismissed agriculture as
an obstacle or an irrelevance, African leaders and officials in
multinational organizations recently have come around to a new view, nicely
summarized by Stephen Lewis, a former United Nations official who
concentrated on African affairs. “Agricultural productivity,”
Lewis declared in 2005, “is indispensable to progress on all other
fronts.”
The potential for advances through agriculture is
large. African farmers today are creating wealth on a scale unimagined a
decade ago. They are likely to continue prospering into the foreseeable
future. Helped by low costs of land and labor and by rising prices for farm products,
African farmers are defying pessimists by increasing their output. They are
cultivating land once abandoned or neglected; forging profitable links with
local, regional, and international buyers; and reviving crops that
flourished in the pre-1960 colonial era, when Africa provided a remarkable
10 percent of the world’s tradable food. Today, that share is less
than one percent.
“The boom in African agriculture is the most
important, neglected development in the region, and it has years to
run,” says Andrew Mwenda, a leading commentator on African political
economy.
The evidence of a farm boom is widespread. In southern
Uganda, hundreds of farmers have begun growing apples for the first time,
displacing imports and earning an astonishing 35 cents each. Brokers ferry
the fruit from the countryside to the capital, Kampala, where it fetches
almost twice as much. Cotton production in Zambia has increased 10-fold in
10 years, bringing new income to 120,000 farmers and their families, nearly
one million people in all. Floral exports from Ethiopia are growing
so rapidly that flowers threaten to surpass coffee as the country’s
leading cash earner. In Kenya, tens of thousands of small farmers who live
within an hour of the Nairobi airport grow French beans and other
vegetables, which are packaged, bar-coded, and
air-shipped to Europe’s grocers. Exports of vegetables,
fruits, and flowers, largely from eastern and southern Africa, now exceed
$2 billion a year, up from virtually zero a quarter-century
ago.
Skeptics still insist that farmers in the region will
be badly handicapped, in the long run, by climate change, overpopulation,
new pandemics, and the vagaries of global commodity prices. Corruption,
poor governance, and civil strife are all added to the list of supposedly
insurmountable obstacles. But similar challenges haven’t stopped
Asian and Latin American farmers from advancing. Even people who see future
gains for African farmers agree, however, that food shortages and famines
will persist, at least within isolated or war-torn areas.
But while Malthusian nightmares dominate international
discussions of Africa, food production in the most heavily peopled areas is
outstripping population growth. In Nigeria, with the largest population of
any African country, food production has grown faster than population for
20 years. In other West African countries, including Ghana, Niger, Mali,
Burkina Faso, and Benin, crop output has risen by more than four percent
annually, far exceeding the rate of population growth. Farm labor
productivity in these countries is now so high that in some cases it
matches the levels in parts of Asia.
“The driver of agriculture is primarily
urbanization,” observes Steve Wiggins, a farm expert at
London’s Overseas Development Institute. As more people leave the
African countryside, there is more land for remaining farmers, and more
paying customers in the city. The growth in food production is so
impressive, Wiggins argues, that a “green revolution” is
already under way in densely populated West Africa.
The growing international demand for food is also
helping Africa’s small farmers. The global ethanol boom has
raised corn prices, and coffee is selling at a 10-year high, for instance.
Multinational corporations are becoming more closely involved in African
agriculture, moving away from plantation-based cultivation and
opting instead to enter into contracts with thousands, even hundreds of
thousands, of individual farmers. China and India, hungry to satisfy the
appetites of expanding middle classes, view Africa as a potential
breadbasket. Finally, African governments are generally more supportive of
farmers than in the past. Even African elites, long disdainful of village
life, are embracing farming, trying to profit from the boom—and
raising the status of this once-scorned activity.
No one model explains the surge in African
agriculture. Diverse sources of success befit an Africa that, across the
board, defies easy generalizations. One recent study finds 15 different
farming “systems” in sub-Saharan Africa. At the level
of the single African farm, diversity abounds too. Most individual farmers
juggle as many as 10 crops. Outcomes among small farmers also vary. The top
25 percent of smallholders are believed to produce four to five times as
much food as the bottom 25 percent. Just as in America not everyone is
rich, in Africa not everyone is poor.
African farmers do share much in common. “A man
with a hoe” remains an accurate description of nearly all who till
the soil. Mechanization is rare. Less than one percent of land is worked by
tractors. Only 10 percent is worked by draft animals. Nearly 90 percent is
worked by hand, from initial plowing to planting, weeding, and harvesting.
Irrigation is also rare; only one percent of sub-Saharan cropland
receives irrigation water. Unpredictable weather, often drought and
sometimes too much rain, bedevils farmers in many areas. Relatively little
fertilizer is used; globally, farmers apply nine times as much per acre as
Africans do. “Much of the food produced in Africa is lost”
after harvest, according to one estimate, because of inaccessible markets,
poor storage methods, and an absence of processing facilities. Finally, use
of improved seed varieties is very limited by global standards.
But these sobering characteristics feature a silver
lining: The potential for gains is large. Some ways farmers can move ahead
are simple. One is to plant crops in straight lines. In Uganda, for
instance, it was long the practice of many farmers to sow seeds
haphazardly; they have been taught in recent years to plant in regularly
spaced rows that vastly improve yields. When so simple a change delivers
such great benefits, the importance of human choice is clear. In
discussions of African affairs, the central role of the power of the
individual and the desire of ordinary people to do better is often lost in
a haze of dubious statistics, gloomy futuristic scenarios, and impossible
calls for improved ethics, leadership, and
institutions.
To glimpse a different picture of Africa, imagine
traveling on a journey, not to Joseph Conrad’s “heart of
darkness,” but to an uncharted, elusive, almost mythical part of the
world’s poorest region, where hope, personal responsibility, and new
incentives are reshaping the lives of ordinary people, turning Conradian
imagery on its head.
The first stop on our
journey is the village of Bukhulu in eastern Uganda. From Kampala, I take
an old van jammed with 15 people and rumble along dirt roads so pockmarked
that pieces of the vehicle fly off during the journey without eliciting any
reaction from the driver. The next morning, from the provincial center of
Mbale, I hitch a ride through the foothills of towering Mount Elgon with an
agricultural extension officer who works for a South African company that
pays Ugandan farmers to grow cotton for export. On the final leg of the
journey, I switch to a bicycle taxi. Balanced precariously on a makeshift
rear seat, the man in front cycling leisurely, I pass cornfields brimming
with ripening ears nearly ready to harvest. The ride costs a dime.
I am here to visit one of my favorite farmers, Ken
Sakwa, who is in the forefront of a significant yet
little-noticed back-to-the-land trend. The
movement is powered by city dwellers who either can’t earn enough
money in the cities or are earning so much that they want to plow their
savings into agro-businesses. Doomsayers constantly point to
Africa’s urbanization as a relentless scourge, stripping the
countryside of talent, but quietly, some Africans are going back to
“the bush.” Sakwa, 37, is one of them. He spent a decade in
Uganda’s mushrooming capital, doing odd jobs for cash. He enjoyed the
excitement of city life but survived only because of the goodwill of
relatives. Ultimately, he exhausted that goodwill. “I was a
parasite,” he admits.
Five years ago, Sakwa decided to claim the vacant farm
of his deceased father in Bukhulu, the village of his birth. None of his
brothers and sisters wanted the land, so he got it all. His wife in Kampala
refused to join him. He divorced her and went back alone.
“I knew I’d achieve if I went back to my
father’s land,” he recalls. “I felt ambition inside
me.”
Farmers in Bukhulu mainly grow cotton, corn, peanuts,
and beans. Even the largest farms encompass no more than a dozen acres. In
his first year back, Sakwa grew corn and beans on one acre, opening the
ground alone, with a small hand hoe. “I worked like an animal,”
he recalls. Even before his first harvest, he looked for a wife. A few
months after his return, he met Jessica in a nearby village. He decided to
court her when he learned her parents were farmers.
“I wanted a wife who could help on the farm and
would be happy doing so,” Sakwa says. He married Jessica and, with
her considerable help, he prospered. In his second year in Bukhulu, he
tilled two acres of land, hiring a tractor to assist in plowing. From an
American aid project, he and some neighbors learned to plant crops in
straight lines. By the third year Sakwa mastered basic farming,
“doing much, much better.” When his old Kampala friends visit
him, they ask, “How is this poor village man getting all this
money?”
Accumulation is only part of Sakwa’s story. How
he spends his profits is significant. One early purchase was a mobile
phone, which allows him to keep abreast of local markets and negotiate
better prices for his crops. That a farmer who
lives without electricity or running water should be able to receive phone
calls from anywhere in the world is perhaps the most radical change in
African material life in decades. Though wireless service came late to the
region, nearly one in five sub-Saharan Africans now owns a cell
phone, and the World Bank estimates that the region’s wireless phone
market is the “fastest-growing in the world.” One morning,
after he plants cottonseeds in a small field, Sakwa receives a call from
the headmaster at his daughter’s boarding school (yes, he can afford
that too!). The headmaster asks for 500 pounds of beans. Sakwa, who has the
beans bagged for sale, wants 15 cents a pound. “Will you
accept?” he asks.
The headmaster wants to pay less. Sakwa refuses.
“I can hold my beans until I get a fair price,” he says.
A few days later, the headmaster calls back and agrees
to the price.
One day, I walk with the
Sakwas to one of their fields. The ground is wet from recent rains. We cut
through a path separating the land of different farmers and soon meet a
family harvesting beans. A husband and wife and their two children are
haphazardly tossing uprooted beans on a wooden cart. Sakwa greets them and
stops to explain that they will fit more on the cart if they make neat
piles. The man acts as if he’s received a revelation. Sakwa starts
rearranging the beans to make sure the man grasps his advice. The man
begins to shift the beans around, and his wife flashes Sakwa a big smile,
thanking him.
We turn off the path, slice through another field, and
come upon a patch of peanuts. Ever the innovator, Sakwa is experimenting
with different types in order to see which grow best. He pulls a few
samples from the ground to show me. Just as I begin to chew on a peanut,
Jessica screams in the distance.
Sakwa races off toward his wife. I follow. When we
reach her, she cries out, “Someone has stolen the beans!”
The plants have been ripped from the field.
“They must have come in the night,” Sakwa says. He has been
forced to hire a neighbor to guard this field in the daytime. He tells the
man he will harvest the corn soon.
One of Sakwa’s
innovations isn’t agricultural but commercial. In order to expand
output and raise his income, he leases land from his neighbors and hires
them as casual laborers, enriching them as well as himself.
Land sales are virtually impossible in rural Africa,
but informal leases are becoming more common. There are no formal land
titles in Sakwa’s village, nor in nearly every other African village,
so his claim to his father’s land is grounded in the
community’s knowledge of Sakwa and his lineage. Until recently, no
one ever bought or sold rural land in Uganda, but with the rise of
small-scale commercial farming the value of farmland can now be
“monetized,” in rough terms, by estimating profit from cash
crops grown over a period of years. Land is coming to be viewed as a
commodity. Informal land deals are flexible, but because they are not
supported by unassailable titles, there is always a possibility of costly
disputes. Sakwa recently experienced such a problem when he leased a
half-acre of very productive land from a neighbor for nearly
$800. But one of the man’s brothers, who didn’t get any money
in the deal, has sued Sakwa in court. He wants to be paid.
Sakwa and his friend Francis Nakiwuza are the most
active acquirers of land in Bukhulu, having each leased four different plots over the
past three years. The lawsuit worries them. One day Nakiwuza and I sit in
Sakwa’s living room as he sifts through his business records, which
he stores in a worn leather briefcase stowed under his bed. He keeps
records on each of his “gardens,” listing the costs and
income.
One reason for disputes: poorly drawn contracts. The
lease for his newest plot, written in Sakwa’s own hand, boils down to
a single sentence in which a neighbor agrees to permit Sakwa to use
“my swampy land of 61 strides in length and 32 strides in
width” for about $200.
The contract lacks any surveyor information and
isn’t registered with any government agency or court. “We trust
people,” Sakwa says.
The rudimentary contract partly reflects the
inexperience of the parties involved. Desiring land is new to Sakwa, and he
dreams of obtaining more. He wants to double his current holding of 10
acres. “I want to make 20 acres,” he says. “That will
make my life good.”
Across the table sits Nakiwuza. He wants more land
too, and brings news of a neighbor who needs to raise money. The man was
caught in a sex act with a young girl. In years past, there would have been
no legal consequences. But today men caught abusing underage women can go
to prison or pay a large fine. For this man, the only way to avoid prison
is to raise money by leasing land.
Sakwa is sorry for the man but happy that either he or
Nakiwuza will get to expand his acreage. “Why shouldn’t the
stronger farmers have more land?” Nakiwuza asks. Often, the land they
lease had been sitting idle. “We are using the land well,” he
says. “Others did nothing with it. Now they have our money, and we
have crops to sell.”
Ken Sakwa is
Africa’s future writ small. Gilbert Bukenya is the future writ large.
He is the vice president of Uganda and a rarity among African politicians: He is passionate
about the value of farming, is himself an innovative farmer, and publicly
encourages farmers to work smarter. One of Bukenya’s greatest
achievements has been to encourage a can-do spirit in
Uganda’s farmers and a sense of pride among other Ugandans in what
their farming compatriots produce.
I met Bukenya one balmy afternoon at his home on the
shores of Lake Victoria, where he experiments with fruits, vegetables, and
dairy cattle. “By farming smarter, Ugandans not only grow more, they
earn more money,” he tells me. Bukenya is an advocate of food
self-sufficiency, pointing to the example of rice. Ugandans pay
tens of millions of dollars annually for rice imported from
overseas—sub-Saharan Africa as a whole imports nearly $2
billion worth. In order to expand the output of homegrown rice,
Bukenya promoted a new African variety that grows in uplands (as opposed to
paddies) and requires less water. Then he argued for the imposition of a 75
percent duty on foreign rice. The measure passed Parliament and brought
rapid benefits: A few of the country’s largest rice importers
invested in milling plants, thus becoming customers of local farmers. The new mills created
jobs and lowered the cost of bringing domestic rice to market, so that
consumers now pay more or less the same for rice as always.
Since foreign rice exporters—notably the
United States, Thailand, and Pakistan—subsidize their growers,
Bukenya thinks it only fair that Uganda defend its own rice farmers, even
though he realizes that some import-substitution schemes fail.
(And rice is only one of the African crops hampered by U.S. and European
farm subsidies and trade barriers.)
Fresh from his rice success, Bukenya is now promoting
the benefits of raising livestock. One September morning I find him
lecturing before a classroom full of ordinary farmers, about 50 of them,
gathered in a school about an hour from Kampala. Wearing a
loose-fitting shirt and sandals, Bukenya jokes easily with his
audience, speaking in a local language. The classroom has no electricity, a
concrete floor, and exposed wooden rafters. Bukenya recalls how his mother
earned the money to send him to school from sales of a beer she concocted.
Switching to a prepared talk, he preaches a simple lesson: “Make
money daily.” One way they can do that, he tells the small crowd, is
by keeping a milk cow or egg-laying chickens. Only a few of the
farmers do anything like this now, and Bukenya spends a good deal of time
explaining how they can get started.
Then he criticizes the country’s traditional
big-horned Ankole cattle. These animals are beautiful and beloved
but provide very little milk, he says, “no matter how hard you
squeeze.” He prefers European Friesian cows. “Five of them will
produce the same as 50 Ankoles,” he says.
Bukenya asks one of the women in the audience to stand
up. He praises the bananas she grows and notes the high output of her
Friesian cows. “You are a model for the others,” he says. The
woman smiles. Then, spreading out his arms and looking across the room, he
says, “Everybody must be a model.”
That kind of exhortation might seem hokey to
Americans, but in an African context Bukenya’s words are incendiary.
It is the mental attitude of African farmers, as much as their lack of
money, that holds them back, Bukenya argues. For ordinary farmers to be
called heroes, or even recognized at all, by a senior political
leader is unprecedented. And Bukenya’s message makes perfect sense.
Surprisingly, few farmers in Uganda or other parts of Africa keep
livestock. In some locales, that’s because of the extreme heat;
disease is another limitation. Yet many farmers don’t raise animals
(at least productive ones) even when conditions for doing so are favorable,
because of the irrational pull of tradition and a lack of knowledge. But teaching skills to
farmers isn’t enough, Bukenya says. “You have to instill
confidence in them that by working harder, they will benefit.”
The potential for breeding (as Souley Madi knows) is
large. Two government ministers in Uganda have recently launched poultry
operations. Uganda’s farm output is soaring, having helped push total
exports in 2006 to nearly $1 billion, double the value of 2002. Much of the
growth came in agriculture: Exports of coffee, cotton, fish, fruits, and
tea doubled. Corn exports nearly tripled. Cocoa quadrupled. Sesame seed
exports are up nearly 10-fold. Says Bukenya, “We are doing very well,
but we can run even faster.”
The beginnings of a
profarmer political movement represents a watershed in African
history. During the 1960s and ’70s, in the first decades after
independence from European colonial rule, African political leaders
blatantly exploited farmers as part of a calculated effort to speed
economic development and make food cheaper for Africa’s then-tiny
urban elite. They essentially nationalized cash crops, such as cotton and
coffee, forcing farmers to sell everything they grew to government
“marketing boards” at fixed prices, often well below the going
rate. That destroyed the incentive to produce. Worse, the boards were
corrupt and inefficient, and they did little or nothing to introduce
farmers to new growing techniques, crop varieties, or customers. Meanwhile,
the industrial schemes financed by the agricultural “surplus”
virtually all flopped.
By the 1990s, African countries were importing large
amounts of food, at great cost and sometimes under absurd circumstances.
Fresh tomatoes rotted in Ghana’s fields, while canned tomatoes from
Italy dominated grocery sales. The story was similar elsewhere, with the
exception of South Africa. A lack of canneries and other means of
preserving fresh fruit and vegetables meant that a third or more of African
output spoiled.
The reliance on imported food, and the demoralization
of farmers, drove many Africans from the bush to the city. But the
situation also spawned a backlash. Change came in two forms. First,
international aid agencies, which during the 1980s and ’90s had
essentially abandoned support for agriculture and encouraged Africans to
develop light industry and services, began to realize the folly of their
approach. As the World Bank admitted in late 2007, “Agriculture has
been vastly underused for development.”
African leaders also reversed course, albeit by fits
and starts, liberalizing agriculture and permitting multinational
corporations to begin buying cash crops such as coffee and cotton directly
from smallholders, who were eager to sell to these private buyers after
being underpaid or even stiffed by government agencies. In Uganda, once
called the “pearl of Africa” by Winston Churchill because of
its enormous agricultural output and excellent climate, thriving
colonial-era agro-businesses were destroyed by the
predations of government after independence in 1962. When a rebel leader
named Yoweri Museveni assumed power in the mid-1980s, he took steps to
reverse course, including a gradual dismantling of the socialized structure
that made every farmer a de facto employee of the state. But the farmers,
having been burned, did not respond quickly. They remembered the worthless
IOUs dispensed by the government.
Besides, telling farmers to grow more is not enough;
even giving them the freedom to sell to whomever they wish is not enough.
Farmers need cash buyers. Without willing customers, paradoxically, growing
more food can grievously hurt farmers—it raises costs and
saddles them with worthless surpluses.
Incredibly, this commonplace escaped farm experts in
Africa for half a century. They have learned the hard way that food
shortages and famines often result not from a scarcity of food but from too
much food. When farmers can’t convert their surplus into cash, they
stop growing extra. No less a farm expert than Norman Borlaug, celebrated
for launching the “green revolution” in Latin America and Asia,
made a sobering error in Ethiopia five years ago (for which he later
apologized). Having helped introduce higher-yielding grains to Ethiopian
farmers, he witnessed a huge growth in output. But because no one thought
about who would purchase the expanded supplies of grain, in a bumper
harvest the surplus rotted and the farmers, who had borrowed money to
obtain seed and other “inputs,” suffered badly.
Now farm experts are beginning to change their views,
putting the customer ahead of production. In 2004, the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) became the first aid donor to pledge to
organize its spending around the principle that the end customer
is the prime mover in African agriculture. Given a ready buyer who is
offering a fair price, African farmers will defy stereotypes of their
inherent conservatism and backwardness. “They move like lightning
when money is on the table,” says David Barry, a British coffee buyer
based in Kampala. “Cash is king.”
USAID realized that expanding farm output only makes
sense when farmers respond to the right signals from buyers about which
products are in demand. Part of the answer was for the agency to pay the
costs of training
farmers to grow those crops, and in higher-quality forms and
greater volumes, that the private buyers sought. It also directly assisted
private agro-firms, paying part of their costs for training
farmers.
A method known as “contract farming” has
become a crucial instrument of African empowerment. Buyers agree to
purchase everything a farmer grows—coffee, cotton, even
fish—freeing him from the specter of rotting crops and
allowing him to produce as much as possible. And because the
buyers—some of them domestic companies, others
multinationals—profit, they have a stake in farmer
productivity and an incentive to provide such things as training and
discounted seed.
A wonderful example of this virtuous circle has
unfolded in Uganda. The country’s largest provider of cooking oil,
Mukwano, had long sold only palm oil imported from Southeast Asia. As an
experiment, the company hired Ugandan farmers to grow sunflower seeds,
which were then crushed into oil locally. In two years, Mukwano enlisted
100,000 farmers, hiring an experienced trainer from India, C. P. Chowdry,
to organize farmers into groups, train leaders, distribute seeds, and
collect the harvest.
Even though Mukwano is the only seller of the
particular seed variety needed, and so sets the price, sunflowers are
attractive to farmers because they require little tending or water, can be
“intercropped” with corn or cotton, and are harvested three
times a year. During the planting season, the company broadcasts a weekly
radio program that gives advice on how to manage the crop. The effort is
wildly popular among farmers. When I visited Uganda’s sunflower belt
on the eve of planting season, I witnessed one farmer, Isaac Aggrey, ask
Chowdry for seeds. In the previous season, Aggrey had earned a whopping
$300 from three acres of sunflowers, putting enough cash in his pocket to
buy a motorbike. When Chowdry told him, “The seeds are gone,”
Aggrey became distraught. Chowdry reminded him that he had warned that this
could happen. “Next time, set aside the money and buy as soon as we
put the seeds on sale,” he said sternly.
About the same time aid
donors recognized the necessity of helping farmers grow more of what buyers
want, the mentality of agricultural experts underwent a sea change. For
nearly half a century, starting in the 1960s, there seemed to be an inverse
correlation between the application of agricultural expertise by national
and international aid agencies and the productivity of African farming: the
greater the number of experts, the worse Africa’s agricultural
performance.
Disdainful of the market, these agricultural
specialists preferred to obsess over arcane questions about soil quality,
seed varieties, and some mythical ideal of crop diversity. In classic
butt-covering mode, they blamed “market failures” and
Africa’s geography for farmer’s low incomes and their
vulnerability to famine and food shortages.
Then, about five years ago, a few brave specialists
suddenly realized that under their very noses some of Africa’s most
significant farm sectors were booming—and booming without
any help from the legions of agricultural scientists and bureaucrats in
Africa. In West Africa, corn production doubled between 1980 and 2000.
Harvests of the lowly cassava—a starchy root that provides
food insurance for many people—steadily expanded. In East
Africa, sales of fresh flowers soared. Once-moribund cash crops,
such as cotton, saw a large expansion, first in West Africa and then in
Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia. The list of improbable winners went on and
on.
Even as a steady diet of stories about
“urgent” food crises in Africa dominated public discussion,
these successes became impossible to ignore. In 2004, the International
Food and Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) published a series of papers
titled “Successes in African Agriculture.” The papers both
reflected and provoked a revolution in thinking about African farming. They
also ended a long conspiracy of silence among aid agencies and professional
Africanists. For decades the “food mafia,” led by the World
Food Program and the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization, had
refused to acknowledge any good news about African farming out of fear that
evidence of bright spots would reduce the flow of charitable donations to
the UN’s massive “famine” bureaucracy, designed to feed
the hungry.
The IFPRI report shattered the convenient consensus
among experts, donors, and African governments that farmers south of the
Sahara were doomed, perpetual victims who could never feed themselves and
hence must permanently proffer the begging bowl. Now, because of IFPRI
(itself a junior member of the “mafia”), some African
agricultural successes could not be denied. That raised a logical question:
If some African farmers can succeed, why can’t even more?
The sea change in serious thinking about
African farming is now of more than academic interest. In nation after
nation, farming is commercially viable, expanding, diversifying, and
generating profits at all levels of society. Though doomsayers continue to
see a bleak outlook for African farmers (the new specter is climate
change), even elites are catching farm fever, recognizing that record
prices for many foodstuffs, along with growing domestic markets and the
possibility of expanding farm acreage in most African countries, means a
brightening future.
Not coincidentally, the World Bank devotes its newest World Development Report to
the status of agriculture globally, and the authors highlight
Africa’s recent gains and future potential. What a turnaround. As
recently as five years ago, economists at the World Bank were telling me
that farm production mattered little since Africans could always import the
food they needed. They would explain that Africans should exploit their
“comparative advantage” in labor costs by building
world-class manufacturing or service industries and allow others, “low-cost producers” elsewhere in the world, to
deliver the necessary foodstuffs to African cities.
Today, Africans have a much greater appreciation of the value of food
self-sufficiency. Africa never spawned the industries the World
Bank favored, and in the face of the withering onslaught from rapidly
industrializing China and India, it isn’t likely to. Yet
Africans are some of the world’s lowest-cost producers of food. And the absence of large plantations (except in
parts of Kenya, Ivory Coast, and southern Africa) is beneficial.
International buyers of major African crops from Europe, Asia, and the
United States have told me repeatedly that small farmers in Africa, relying
on their own land and family labor and using few costly inputs such as
chemical fertilizers, are more efficient producers than plantations.
Counterintuitively, Africa’s attractiveness to global food
buyers is growing precisely because its agriculture is dominated by small
farmers. And there are plenty of them.
The marriage of capitalism
and agriculture is not a panacea for rural Africans. Uganda and Cameroon
boast some of the best land in the sub-Saharan region. Many other
African countries are doing well enough in farming that they can continue
to raise output and incomes rapidly by working smarter, notwithstanding the
challenges of climate change and poor soil. Yet a few parts of Africa live
up to the nightmarish visions of the pessimists.
Malawi is one of those places. In this poor southern
African country, Lorence Nyaka, a postal worker turned farmer, is fighting
a losing battle.
On less than an acre of dry and dusty land, Nyaka, who
is 51, tries to support his wife, Jesse, and 10 children, growing corn and
cassava with only a hoe. Without fertilizers or irrigation, his yields are
poor and he’s totally dependent on uncertain rains.
Not long before I visited Nyaka, he lost a third of
his land to his wife’s brother, who had become old enough to collect
his share of the family’s inherited property. As he explained the
situation, Nyaka slashed at a patch behind his house that was barely larger
than a pool table. He was preparing furrows for corn seeds that he would
plant at the onset of the rains, still months away.
Worse, thanks to disease, Nyaka has more mouths to
feed. AIDS took the lives of Jesse’s brother and his wife, so their
four children now live with the Nyakas. That means less food for their own
six children, but to Nyaka his obligation is clear. “If I don’t
help these children,” he says, “they probably die.”
In these parts, people are so crowded that
there’s little space for cattle or other domesticated animals. Nyaka
does have six chickens, one of which stays, for safekeeping, in his
bedroom.
“Our problem in Malawi is we do work hard, but
we don’t get enough food,” Nyaka says. He and his family
subsist on a diet of cassava and a fluffy corn dish called nsima; both provide calories but
scant protein. There is nothing he can do, he says, to alter his routine
except wait for the rains—and pray. His fatalism, however
frustrating, is typical of poor farmers in these parts.
In truth, Nyaka’s options are limited. Thomas
Malthus, the English economist and demographer, is getting his revenge on
Lorence Nyaka and hundreds of thousands others in Malawi, the most densely
populated country in Africa, where 13 million people jam into a narrow
strip of land. Two hundred years ago, Malthus described a world undone by
too many people and too little food—a world much like
Malawi today, where life expectancy is less than 40 years and food
shortages are chronic. With about half its population under the age of 15,
Malawi is expected to approach a population of 20 million by 2020.
While much of the world now worries about the effects
of plunging birthrates and declining populations, in Africa overpopulation
remains the most serious threat to well-being, and perhaps
nowhere is the problem worse than in Malawi, a 550-mile-long wedge between
much larger Zambia and Mozambique. “The challenge here is to enable
the population to survive,” says Stephen Carr, a specialist on rural
development who has worked in Africa for 50 years.
Few Malawians use birth control, and any coercive
action to cap family size is unthinkable. Nyaka says that whether he and
his wife have more children “depends on God.” Even in the midst
of the AIDS pandemic—one in five Malawian adults is HIV
positive—condom use is infrequent. Only one in two
Malawians can read. The government seems confused, at best, over how to
help farmers. “The distribution of the spoils of office takes
precedence over the formal functions of the state, severely limiting the
ability of public officials to make policies in the general
interest,” according to a 2006 study from a British think tank.
Carr, who advises the World Bank, says that migration
“may be the only way to prevent a Malthusian
meltdown.” With aid from the World Bank, the Malawian
government has started a resettlement scheme, bringing people from the
country’s overcrowded south to the north, but the effort helps
relatively few. Another possibility is to encourage people to leave the
country, just as migrants left Germany and Ireland during times of economic
hardship. Land is plentiful in neighboring Mozambique, for example, and
many people in both countries speak the same indigenous language and share
customs. Zambia, another neighbor, needs more farm workers for its fertile
land. Mobile Malawians could benefit both countries.
Time and again, of course, human ingenuity has
provided an escape hatch, giving the lie to Malthus’s central claim
that population growth invariably outstrips food production. In Malawi,
however, the chances are growing that his grim forecast is right on
target.
Even here, though, there is reason for hope, if only
farmers can be roused to do more. Nyaka, for instance, lives within 200
yards of a working well. Water flows all day long. If he carried water to his land, he
could bucket-irrigate vegetables during the long dry season. When
I ask him why he won’t irrigate in this manner, he creases his brow
and shakes his head. The possibility is inconceivable.
Yet 30 miles away, outside the old colonial town of
Zomba, nestled in the central highlands of Malawi, Philere Nkhoma, an
inspired trainer in one of the Millennium Villages demonstration projects
masterminded by Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs, is showing
farmers the benefits of hand-irrigation. On the morning I visit, dozens of men
are dripping water on row after row of vegetables in a “garden”
the size of a football field. This method of babying high-value
crops goes beyond watering. While Nkhoma chews on a piece of sugar cane,
men feed spoonfuls of fertilizer to a row of cabbage plants. Nkhoma shouts
encouragement to one farmer, addressing him as “brother” and
complimenting him on his effort. “One secret of this thing,”
she says later, “you need to know how to speak to the people. You
should make sure you’re part of them.”
Nkhoma’s close involvement with hundreds of
small farmers in central Malawi won’t grab headlines, but it
represents a radical new beginning for farmers, long ignored by the very
people paid to help them. Malawi’s “agricultural extension
service has collapsed,” according to a confidential British report.
The gap is partly filled by aid projects such as the one that employs
Nkhoma, whose own life story mirrors the shift in the status of farming in
Africa. She’s part of a new generation of urban Africans unafraid of
getting their hands dirty. After more than 10 mostly frustrating years as a
government farm adviser, she was chosen by a foreign donor to earn a
bachelor’s degree in agriculture. After graduation she joined the
Sachs project, where she has wide latitude to innovate and the resources to
carry out plans. “If you have an energetic extension worker, you only
need to change the mindset of the people,” she says. “When that
happens, change can occur very quickly.”
Indeed, last fall Malawi posted a record corn crop,
far exceeding expectations and eliminating, at least for now, any threat of
general famine in the country.
Men and women do not live
by bread alone. I am reminded of this cliché on a cool September
afternoon in Kampala, where I meet Ken Sakwa inside a fast-food
restaurant called Nando’s. Sakwa is in the capital alone, having
traveled from his village in eastern Uganda in a rickety van. He looks fit,
if a bit thinner than I recall him.
As we munch on grilled chicken and french fries, he
recounts his latest achievements. In February he leased another piece of
land, bringing his total acreage to 12, and he now regularly employs six of his neighbors to help him work
his fields. In a sign of his standing in his community, village elders
brokered a favorable settlement of his vexing dispute with the brother of a neighbor from whom
he had leased land. Managing the resentments of
less prosperous farmers in the village remains
a burden. Sakwa tells me that lately he has been finding small bottles,
stuffed with curious contents, near his house. He ignores them, though he
knows they are meant as a form of juju, intended by his neighbors to put a
hex on him. To smooth relations, Sakwa now lends money to people in need,
but he admits, “I usually don’t get paid back.”
Sakwa’s success is indeed striking. He has saved
more than $10,000 out of his farm profits over the prior five years, and
he’s now constructing a large commercial building along the main road
near his village. He plans to rent out about a dozen shops, then sell the
building and bank his profits.
While we talk, one of Sakwa’s cousins, a younger
man who lives in the city, joins us. “My relatives in Kampala think I
am rich now,” Sakwa says. “But I feel I overwork myself.”
He normally works from dawn until dusk, and unlike many farmers he never
drinks alcohol, sparing himself the expense of buying the local brew from
the makeshift village pub.
I ask Sakwa whether he might make an exception today
and share a Club beer with me. We have something to celebrate. His wife,
Jessica, gave birth to twin daughters a few months before, and I imagine he
must be proud. He says nothing. When his cousin steps away to the toilet,
Sakwa whispers to me, “The children are sick.”
He adds, “I am here to get medicine for
them.” Oh, no. Earlier, I told a friend of mine that Sakwa was
traveling to Kampala for no apparent reason. She is from the same region
and ethnic group as Sakwa and guessed that he must need
“special” medicine that he is afraid to obtain near his
village. I scoffed at her suggestion. I lean toward Sakwa and say softly,
“Your newborn babies have AIDS.”
Sakwa purses his lips and nods. Suddenly, his loss of
weight seems ominous. His eyes look gaunt. “And you?” I
ask.
“I tested positive. Jessica also.”
I ask Sakwa if I can telephone my friend. She counsels
people with the disease, helping them to get services and
anti-retroviral drugs, often provided at no charge by foreign
donors and the government. The ARVs are indeed remarkable, bringing many
years of health to most who take them properly.
An hour later, I sit in an outdoor café with
Sakwa and my friend. They immediately begin speaking in Gisu, the language
of their ethnic group. “You can still be a successful farmer, even
more successful,” she tells Sakwa. “So long as you get
treatment, you can still farm as well as you do now.”
I wonder whether he believes her. She looks him in the
eyes and says, this time in English, “Don’t let the disease
take away your success.”
The woman, who is a few years younger than Sakwa,
realizes that her sister attended school with him. She promises to help him
and Jessica get treatment quickly.
Sakwa thanks us when he leaves. It is night in Kampala
now, and I sit in the darkness. The electricity is out, and I clutch my
Club beer, sipping at the bottle even though it is empty.
My friend orders me another beer, and a soda for
herself. “It is good we can deal with what is,” she says.

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G. Pascal Zachary teaches journalism at Stanford University and is finishing a book on Africa for Scribner.
Reprinted from Winter
2008 Wilson Quarterly
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