The unfulfilled agricultural potential of Africa's giant
Agriculture
is the cornerstone of the Congolese economy and ‘employs’ three quarters of the
working population. As the World Bank (WB) report phrases it: “Of all sources
of growth, the agricultural sector has the greatest potential for poverty
reduction.”
With
ample amount of sunshine and rainfall, why are the markets often so empty, only
offering cassava, maize, rice, plantains and beans – literally!?!
Cassava
(Manioc) is the country's major food crop and is grown in all parts of the DRC
– often claimed as their national dish, but actually quiet new. They make Fufu
balls, chikwon (like a stick of bread made out of a thick glue) and ponde (a
bitter tasting big leaf sort of spinach) out of it. Just like the Europeans
took to the South-American potato, corn and cassava/manioc spread with the
Portuguese arrival. By the end of the
15th century the Mexican corn and the Brazilian cassava started their conquest
of Congolese cuisine. The cooking banana/plantain had arrived already 1,000
years earlier. At the time yams, sorghum and palm oil were already cultivated.
Dogs were kept for protection; even chickens and goats were around. Termites,
snails, larvae, caterpillar and wild honey were collected – all around the year
500 A.C. Things weren't so bad before the white skins arrived.
Leopold
further entrenched manioc as a national food item, as people were forced to
cultivate and eat this easy to grow crop, to have enough energy and time to
give to the king - for free, of course. With the Belgians taking over Leopold’s
colony, they ‘industrialized’ the country (from 1908-1921), starting plantation
for coffee, cacao, tobacco, and palm oil. William Lever from Liverpool was
specifically interested in the palm oil, for his production of soap. A bit
later (around 1930) cotton plantations were also established and would make the
DRC the leading African producer of cotton by 1960, the year of independence.
Today
cotton production has virtually disappeared.
Agricultural
productivity in general has continuously fallen for the last half a century,
with the drop in industrial crops (coffee, cocoa, tea, rubber, oil palms, and
cotton) being spectacular. At the time
of independence, Congo was the second largest exporter of palm oil in the
world, after Malaysia but before Indonesia. Today, it imports over 50,000 tones
of palm oil.
Exports
of palm oil have stopped in 1985, bananas and groundnut oil stopped already in
1970, and cotton in 1977.
The
collapse of commercial agriculture can be contributed to Mobutu’s
"Zairianization," (1973), while the continuing war in the east of the
country has been destroying hopes to rebuild the sector over the last decades.
In the 1990s agriculture was still up to 50% of the national revenue, but only
because of the collapse of other economic sectors (mining in particular).
As
mentioned, agriculture has the highest potential to reduce poverty, also
because it is labour-intensive. The growing organic market should also be kept
in mind when thinking about the potential of export to northern markets. After
all the soils here have been largely untouched by toxic fertilizers and
pesticides so heavily used in the North since WWII.
Secondly,
agricultural income tends to be spent on locally produced goods and services.
Lastly, growth in agricultural output lowers the price of foodstuffs thereby
making "invisible transfers“ to the population as a whole.
The
DRC has 80 million ha of arable land, of which only 9 % of which is currently
farmed. The wide diversity of agro-climatic conditions, the abundant and
regular rainfall, as well as the presence of large volumes of surface water
would allow highly diversified production. The Congo basin provides a
favourable climate for growing oil palms, rubber, coffee, cocoa, bananas and
cassava, while the savannah is better for cotton, cereals, pulses and stock
rearing. The mountainous areas, on the
other hand, where the climate is relatively temperate, are suitable for coffee,
tea, potatoes, and livestock rearing. The vast areas available for pasture
could allow over 40 million head of cattle to be raised, whereas now the
national herd is only around 700,000.
Despite
all this potential food production has been inadequate to meet the needs of
even the growing population, causing increased food insecurity throughout the
country, and particularly in urban areas even though imports of rice, corn and
palm oil have considerably increased.
Issues
of the Congolese agriculture sector include, but are not limited to:
Constraints on access to credit, impossibility of producing on a large scale,
the absence of improved varieties and inputs, inappropriate cultivation techniques,
a high rate of disease and pests, extremely high post -harvest losses, as well
as lack of agricultural machinery. A sharp rise in transport costs because of
infrastructure deterioration and systematic racketeering from official services and armed groups is further
worsening the situation.
At
the time of independence, the Congo's transport network consisted of a
multimodal network of 152,000 km of highways and rural roads, 16,200 km of
water routes and 5,000 km of railway tracks. Following decades of neglect, a
large part of this network is no longer operational.
Beyond
the obvious other issue of land rights, we also face a paradoxical labor constraints
within the DRC, as most large agricultural exploitations indicate problems not
only in mobilizing skilled personnel (agricultural technicians, mechanics,
heavy equipment operators), but also unskilled and inactive labour. Skilled
technicians are extremely rare and large agricultural enterprises often have to
train their personnel themselves. This not only involves noteworthy additional
costs but the enterprise also runs the non-negligible risk of seeing its
personnel go off to seek alternative employment elsewhere, once they have been
trained. Furthermore, labour
productivity is generally very low and affected by a high rate of absenteeism,
up to 20 %.
With
this plethora of issues the WB predicts "the need for substantial foreign
investment" to revived the agricultural sector. But I believe that this is
exactly what is wrong with development, and aid in the DRC in particular these
days. The reliance, yes the addiction to
foreign support. In the richest country in the world, the government should be
forced to use more money for the public than private spending. Reybrouch (in
"Congo a history", currently not available in english) underlines
that the 2005 budget for the leader of the country was 8 times higher than the
health budget, and 6 times higher than the agricultural budget. When Kabila
Senior passed away (was assassinated) the first thing the parliament did was
not to work on the constitution, re-organize the army, or ensure the right for
people to vote, NO, the first thing was to increase their pay from $600 (mind
you a Professor gets $30 per month) to $1,200, and senators even to $1,500 (in
2007 to $4500 and to $6000/month in 2008), and in 2005 they old gave themselves
a SUV worth $22,000, because the streets in Kinshasa were so bad (never mind
spending this money on fixing the streets). All while 80% of their fellow
citizens live with less than $1.25 a day.
Yet
there is hope. Cocoa bares huge potential (not just because I love chocolate).
Cocoa cultivation has never developed in the DRC despite excellent agricultural
and climatic conditions. It doesn’t even require intensive labour or complex
growing methods. At the time of independence, 5,200 tons were produced by
agri-businesses in the Equateur and Bas Congo provinces. Unilever used to
produce 45% of the total production and 5 other big plantations produced 40%. Currently yields are very low (200kg/ha
versus 450 kg/ha in Cote d’Ivoire and more than a ton in Vietnam). Growers
often sell beans that are inadequately fermented, dried and often immature.
Lot’s of room for improvement.
The
WB writes: “Development prospects for cocoa production in the DRC seem very
positive. Medium term growth of global consumption is projected at 3% with new
markets .... Production in Cote d’Ivoire, the leading producer in the world has
been hampered by the crisis facing the country. Among others, the bank advices
for a partnership within the “International Cocoa Initiative” and the “World
Cocoa Foundation” (that big companies like Mars have supported) which have
committed themselves to buying, starting 2020, only international cocoa whose
production meets the social and environmental standards required by markets in
the North.... And I could get some chocolate :)
First
and foremost the country needs a committed government to invest in this vital
and important sector. In fact, under Kabilas's leadership, they have declared
agriculture to be a “priority of priorities” and vowed 10% for national budget
towards the sector since 2002. Unfortunately, the Government has been unable to
follow through on their promise with agricultural spending not surpassed 2.5%
of the government’s total budget since.
It
should be noted that project-based financing from international development
partners supplement the very modest national budget allocations. In recent
years international funding has often exceeded funding from the central
Government, probably also having a more significant impact on the agriculture
sector than national resources "due to sharper targeting, better
partnership with provincial and local institutions, and more efficient and
transparent use" (WB)
Clearly,
public expenditure on agriculture must increase, especially in face of the
dramatic positive role it can have on poverty reduction. Yet again, I wonder
what would happen if all international aid agencies would pull out and let the
Congolese figure it out themselves. The continued crutch that has been provided
has seemingly fostered a begging-bowl-budgeting approach, holding the giant in
the heart of Africa further back. For now, I have to rely on my own grading
skills to have a larger variety. But for the 65 million others out there, I
dearly hope for a renewed, and more benevolent, investment that has the potential
to allow the majority of this country to lead a more decent and hopeful life.
Sources:
World Bank Report - DRC Diagnostic Trade
Integration Study , July 2010
Kongo
- eine Geschichte by David Van Reybrouck
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