posted on 2024-09-05, 23:36authored byMalcolm J. Blackie
The prospect of attempting to analyse agricultural policy in Zimbabwe over the years 1965 to 1986 is daunting. The period includes some of the most dramatic political and
natural shocks absorbed by the Zimbabwe economy this
century. The year 1965 marks the illegal assumption of independence
(UDI) by the previous Rhodesia government. UDI preceeded the most intense phase of the liberation war; a war which was largely fought over, and in, the farming areas of Zimbabwe. Between 1965 and 1980, the economy had to withstand the economic sanctions imposed against the Smith government, and the inflationary shocks of the massive oil price rises in the 1970s. Agriculture was severely hit by these combined blows with whole farm gross margins declining by 22 percent in real terms between 1973 and 1979 (Chavunduka, 1982). In 1980 came legal independence
and a total reversal of government political ideology. A series of droughts, including an almost unprecedented three year drought from 1982-83 to 1984-85, put further pressure on the agricultural sector.
A research paper on Zimbabwe's agricultural policy during the period 1965 to 1986.
Funding
US Agency For International Development (US-AID)
History
Publisher
University of Zimbabwe (UZ) Publications/ Michigan State University (MSU)
Citation
Blackie, M.J. (1987) The elusive peasant: Zimbabwe's agricultural policy, 1965-1986. In: Rukuni, M. and Eicher, C.K. (eds.) Food security for Southern Africa, pp. 114-145. Harare: Department of Agricultural Economics and Extension.
IDS Item Types
Book chapter
Copyright holder
University of Zimbabwe (UZ)/ Michigan State University (MSU)