Zimbabwe grapples to plug food deficit

Harare. Bad weather, power disruptions and a massive farming switch from grain to cash crops like tobacco have left Zimbabwe, formerly known as Africa’s bread-basket, grappling to plug a food deficit.

Monday, September 30, 2013
A vendor selling bananas poses in front of his cart in the downtown of Harare. Xinhua

Harare. Bad weather, power disruptions and a massive farming switch from grain to cash crops like tobacco have left Zimbabwe, formerly known as Africa’s bread-basket, grappling to plug a food deficit.Zimbabwe requires 2 million tonnes of grain a year to feed its people and livestock but only managed 968,000 tonnes for the 2011/ 12 season. For the 2012/13 season, production is projected to further plunge to 789,000 tonnes, forcing the government to negotiate food imports with affordable prices. Neighboring Zambia, which has surplus maize after back-to-back bumpy harvest, pledged to help out with 150,000 tonnes of maize. So far, Lusaka has dispatched about 19,000 tonnes to Zimbabwe for 10 million U.S. dollars, according to Agriculture, Mechanization and Irrigation Development Minister Joseph Made. But the minister told state media over the weekend that the government is scrambling to raise 60 million U.S. dollars in order to have the remaining 131,000 tonnes delivered.  "We have since written to the Ministry of Finance for more funds to enable the movement of grain from Zambia,” Made said.Maize is the main component to make Zimbabweans’ favorite staple food sadza. For wheat, the country is estimated to produce less than 50,000 tonnes while the demand is about 400,000 tonnes, said Vice President Joyce Mujuru, who chairs the country’s food security and nutrition board. She blamed frequent power cuts, high input costs, among others, for the decline in domestic production. The World Food Program (WFP) estimated that about 2.2 million Zimbabweans will need food aid by the start 2014, up from 1.6 million early this year. The food shortage is foreseen to be the worst in four years. Veteran President Robert Mugabe also said in May that the state of national nutrition was worrisome with one in three children being chronically malnourished; 25 percent of all deaths under five years being attributed to nutritional deficiencies and 47 percent of women being anaemic.Zimbabwe’s farming preparations have always been behind almost every season because of funding constraints and with inputs being availed well into theplanting season.  Maize producer prices have also not been favorable, withfarmers opting for the more lucrative cash crops such as tobacco and cotton. Even banks appear to be more keen on funding cash crops than the grain. According to state media reports, the banking sector has mobilized 620 million U.S. dollars to finance farming for the 2013/ 14 agricultural season, up from 549 million U.S. dollars in the previous year, but half of the money will go towards tobacco production.