The
recent turnaround in Malawi, a small nation in Southern
Africa, from being a food deficit country to one producing
surplus food grains and overcoming a persisting and
excruciating famine is one of the most dramatic incidents
in the history of the battle against hunger by the
African nations. Malawi has been in the world headlines
since 2002 with reports of widespread starvation deaths
and hunger related diseases. The estimates of victims
of hunger varied from 500 to several thousand, which
compared unfavourably, even with the infamous Nyasaland
famine of 1949 (said to have claimed around 200 lives)
under British colonial rule. A large section of the
population of this predominantly rural nation was
forced to resort to eating banana stems and roots
in a bid for survival.
This painful situation was recompensed when Malawi
increased her corn production fascinatingly in the
last couple of years. A record volume of maize output
of 2.7 and 3.4 million metric tons in 2006 and 2007
respectively, up from the 1.7 million in 2005 transformed
the famine-routed country to a food surplus economy.
The country, till recently heavily dependent on the
United Nations World Food Programme for feeding its
population, has itself supplied as much as 400,000
tons of maize to the World Food Programme in 2007
for fighting an emergency food scenario in neighbouring
Zimbabwe.
The important lesson for policy-makers in other African
countries, which continue to battle with chronic hunger
and food insecurity, from the Malawi turnaround, is
the fact that it has been triggered solely by a government
policy intervention- a reintroduction of deep fertilizer
subsidies as part of the 2005 Fertilizer Subsidy Policy.
This policy was implemented at the cost of inviting
the wrath of the donor community, particularly the
IMF, World Bank and the USAID. Starting in 2006, and
on a larger scale this year, the government distributed
coupons to low-income farmers to allow them to purchase
two 110 pound sacks of fertilizer for 950 kwacha (roughly
$7) a price around one-fifth the market price of 4,500
kwacha. The government also gave them coupons to buy
seeds enough for planting half an acre. As a result,
the average farmer's yield jumped to two tons per
hectares from 0.8 tons.
The subsidy programme has cost the government $62
million -- 6.5 percent of its total budget. The move
was thoroughly opposed by economists and officials
associated with the donor agencies who argued that
the large expansion in subsidies will worsen the budget
deficit, create distortions in the market and not
lead to any enhancement in efficiency in the economy.
Their argument fell flat in the wake of the phenomenal
jump in the corn production, which saved the country
$120 million that it had spent in 2005 importing food
aid. An additional $120 million were earned by the
nation through the sale of maize to Zimbabwe and other
countries. This success, which has accompanied Malawi's
return to Keynesian policies, has raised serious questions
regarding the hunger-fighting policies pursued by
several African nations under the aegis of the IMF
and World Bank. The bold decision of the Malawi government
to break away from the IMF Structural Adjustment Programme
(SAP) for agriculture and the ensuing food security
that it achieved, bluntly points out that the North
Atlantic vision of 'one size fits it all' may not
really be the best way of tackling the diverse problems
of the different LDCs.
Fertilizer subsidies have been a bone of contention
between the Malawi government and the IMF-World Bank
ever since the SAP was introduced in agriculture in
1993, the year in which the country transformed into
a multi-party democracy. The agricultural sector in
this predominantly agricultural economy is divided
into two sub-sectors: large commercial estates and
small farm agriculture- the latter producing some
80% of the food consumed in the country. Historically,
the corn production has been held as synonymous with
food security by the Malawian population and its political
circles. In contrast to this, the implementation of
the SAP sought to diversify agriculture and make farmers
more price-responsive. This resulted in a gradual
reduction in the production of food grains. Over the
last decade, the Smallholder farmers have been largely
plagued by deteriorating soil fertility and a lack
of access to fertilizers. Reduced to near subsistence
farming, most farms had low maize yields and were
unable to grow enough food to feed their families
throughout the year.
In a bid to rejuvenate food-grains production, the
government embarked on the 'Starter Pack' programme
in 1999. The 1998-99 and 1999-2000 Starter Pack campaigns
(SP1 and SP2) supplied farm households with free packs
containing 15 kg of fertilizer, 2 kg of maize seed
(the main staple food) and 1 kg of legume seed ('Starter
Packs in Malawi' by Sarah levy, Bridging research
and Policy, Global Development Network). SP1 and SP2
were universal programmes covering all rural smallholder
households in Malawi, providing almost 3 million packs
each year. Under Fund-Bank pressure, the government
was forced to scale down this programme and introduce
the Targeted Inputs Programme (TIP) in 2001. The number
of beneficiaries under TIP fell to 1.5 million in
2001 and subsequently to only a million in 2002. The
dismantling of the universal 'Starter Pack' programme
and unsuccessful targeting under the misguidance of
the donor agencies marked the beginning of the 'hungry
period' which eventually resulted in a severe famine
in the next few years.
From Chart 1, we can see the increase in corn production
in the couple of years when the universal 'Starter
Pack' was implemented. The program contributed to
an increase of two to three 50 kg bags of maize on
average per beneficiary household. In 2000, the high
corn output of 2.5 million MT (FAOSTAT) actually meant
350,000 tons of surplus maize in the economy. Thereafter,
the corn production declined steeply in 2001. The
persisting low output for the next three years led
to severe food shortage and soaring maize prices depriving
millions of people of two square meals a day. The
subsequent upturn in the corn production graph in
2006 happened only when the government ignored donors'
advice and decided to dedicate a large part of its
budget for reintroducing deep fertilizer subsidies.
Source: FAOSTAT for 1997
to 2005, the corn production figures for the
last two years are as reported by the GoM. |
With a population of 13 million in 2007, Malawi needs
more than 2 million metric tons of grain a year for
self-sufficiency in food production. This was achieved
in each of the last two years with the 2007 corn production
being a record high since the country gained independence
in 1964. Chart 2, showing the trends in per capita
corn production in Malawi, indicates the return of
self-sufficiency in food production, which she had
lost at the start of the 21st century. The 200 kg
plus per capita corn output witnessed at the end of
the last century returned in the last couple of years
much to the relief of the millions of Malawians who
have remained hungry for most part of the current
century.
The programme has also had a positive impact on the
livelihoods of the people. The low maize prices during
2006-07 led to an increase in the real wages of ganyu
(casual labour) by 75% or more. In the past few years,
not only have households that create opportunities
for ganyu become very limited but ganyu itself had
become exceedingly exploitative. This had largely
aggravated the situation of poverty and food insecurity
in recent times.
Source: Calculated on the
basis of corn production figures from FAOSTAT
and GoM and
population figures from the National Statistical
Office, GoM. |
The surplus corn production in the last couple of
years has been credited to the better monsoons by
some officials and economists. Alan Eastham, the US
ambassador to Malawi said in a recent interview- "The
plain fact is that Malawi got lucky last year…they
got fertilizer out while it was needed. The lucky
part was that they got the rains" (Celia W. Dugger,
The NY Times, Dec 2, 2007). It is rather naïve
on their part to attribute the turnaround to rainfall
variations as the food shortage and famine itself
was created by human folly in the first place. The
annual rainfall data (Table 1) shows that Malawi actually
received her highest rainfall in the last decade in
2001, ironically, the year in which the food shortage
first appeared. The sharp decline in corn output in
this year coincides with and was clearly triggered
by the dismantling of the 'Starter pack' programme.
On the contrary, the year 2000 that saw surplus corn
production experienced very poor monsoons; and in
fact, the annual rainfall in the first three years
of the 'hungry' period has been higher than that of
2000. The lean monsoons in 2004 and 2005 further worsened
the famine conditions that had already set into the
countryside due to bad policies. It is amply clear
that the better rains in the last two years would
have also gone to a waste, like in 2001, had the government's
fertilizer policy not been in place.
Table 1: Annual
Rainfall: Malawi |
Year |
1998 |
1999 |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
Rainfall (mm) |
37,523 |
39,104 |
28,322 |
42,705 |
33,910 |
33,950 |
26,440 |
25,427 |
Source: Department of Meteorological Services,
Malawi |
The reaction of the donor agencies to the overwhelming
success of the subsidy policy sought to camouflage
their own failure. The World Bank while expressing
its views stated that they were never opposed to subsidies
but were still concerned that Malawi does not have
a well-charted path of eventually doing away with
her subsidies. It is really difficult for the Malawian
civil society groups, policymakers and her people
to comprehend why they should be 'doing away' with
their most successful economic programme since independence.
The attitude of the Fund-Bank to the fertilizer subsidies
is not really unexpected. Their role in messing up
the country's fertilizer policies forms only one half
of the story of the dreadful famine. The blatantly
incorrect advice of the IMF, WB and EU Commission
on how Malawi should (mis)manage her grain reserves
really completes the saga of the Malawi famine.
The privatisation of the state grain marketing board
in Malawi (ADMARC) has been an objective of the World
Bank for 10 years. The drive for the privatisation
of ADMARC would seriously undermine the vital social
role that ADMARC was playing by procuring grain through
its subsidized markets even in the remotest parts
of the nation. To hasten the collapse of the public
food distribution system, the pressure for privatization
was complemented by IMF advice in 2001 to the National
Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) to sell off about 100,000
MT of its strategic grain reserves to pay off a loan
to ABSA, a South African bank. The high costs of food
storage were cited as an additional justification
for this unsolicited advice. The liberalized environment
facilitated widespread corruption in the sale of grain
reserves. A situation emerged where a large part of
the reserves had been sold to unscrupulous profiteers.
The government was left with near zero reserves when
the food shortage appeared due to low corn production
in 2001. The private traders had hoarded the maize
for resale at a higher price once the hunger struck.
In December and January, the price of maize reached
as high as 40 Malawian Kwacha (MK) per kilogram, up
from MK 4 in June 2001.
Once the country was struck with the famine, the officials
of the donor agencies got themselves busy in shouldering
off the responsibility of the mismanagement of grain
reserves. It was a difficult task as the world had
already come to know the culprits behind the man-made
famine that had broken out in Malawi. Horst Kohler,
the IMF Managing Director disowned the advice when
he appeared before a British Parliamentary Committee
on July 4 2002, and made the following defence: "…this
is an issue in the responsibility of the World Bank
and the EU Commission. The IMF was part of this process
of giving advice to the Malawi Government and the
IMF may also have not been attentive enough,…have
sent the President of Malawi a letter in which I made
clear that he was involved with the World Bank and
the EU Commission in this project; that the IMF was
part of, say, the kind of international advice and
the IMF may, again, not have been attentive enough
how they exercised how to run this maize stock, but
it was not the responsibility of the Fund to implement
the advice. It is clearly an issue to think how we
can avoid that this kind of mistake will happen again."
(Francis Ng'Ambi, African Business, Jan 1 2003) The
above faltering defense speaks better than none other
as to who the culprits were behind the grain debacle.
The Malawi famine is a classic example of what happens
when poor countries are forced to adopt the straight-jacketed
reform policies preached by the Western donor agencies.
The re-emergence of food surplus in Malawi has illustrated
that it is better to follow what the Western developed
nations practice than to pay heed to what they preach
for others. At the peak of the 2002 food crisis, while
the Malawian government was suffering the results
of the IMF's anti-subsidy policies and inappropriate
agriculture advice, the US government passed an agriculture
bill that increased subsidies to its domestic farmers.
Although, it is difficult for a poor African nation
to work against the will of the donor agencies, it
is in their own interests to show the same resolve
that the Malawian president Mutharika exhibited at
the time of launching his fertilizer subsidy policy
when he declared, "As long as I'm president, I don't
want to be going to other capitals begging for food"
(Dugger, The NY Times, Dec 2, 2007).
Decemeber 10, 2007.
|