Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Deadly Medical Myths


Zambian health officials are grappling with a wave of dead-on-arrival cases at the country’s main referral hospital. The spike in cases may be related to residents not following Covid-19 guidelines, as well as to widespread misconceptions about the virus.

Zambian health officials have spotted a worrisome trend: More and more patients are dying before reaching University Teaching Hospital (UTH), the country’s largest referral hospital.

“We have recorded an increase in the number of Brought-In-Dead (BID) cases,” says Dr Lloyd Mulenga, director of infectious diseases at Zambia’s Health Ministry. According to him, UTH recorded 4,339 BID cases from early June to early November as compared to 3,711 in the same period in 2019.

The people arriving dead at the hospital died from a variety of causes, not only Covid-19. But according to Mulenga, the spike may be related to the pandemic, reflecting a failure of many residents to comply with Covid-19 prevention measures.

As of mid-December 2020, Zambia had a total of more than 18,400 Coronavirus cases, of which 367 ended in death, according to www.worldometers.info, an independent statistics portal. Covid-19 infections continue to rise, with many patients suffering from other diseases alongside Coronavirus.

The increased number of dead-on-arrival cases may be related to a growing tendency to self-medicate against Covid-19, in addition to failing to follow recommended preventive measures.

In hopes of fighting the virus, many Zambians are using drugs that were developed to combat other diseases, or are taking “various herbal concoctions,” Mulenga says. “This undermines medical efforts to control the virus and prevent new infections.”

Dr. Nyambe Mukubesa, a resident doctor at the Ministry of Health, confirms that assessment. “Many citizens are abusing malaria drugs and other medicines to treat Covid-19, without seeking medical advice,” he says. “So a surge in new cases is likely to remain a worry.”

Those views are confirmed by a survey of 1,035 Zambians carried out in March and April 2020 by Ipsos, the Paris-based market research and consulting firm. The survey shows widespread misconceptions about the virus. “Approximately half believe that Covid-19 can be prevented by drinking lemon juice and Vitamin C (54 %), or that a hot climate prevents the spread of the virus (49 %),” Ipsos says in a report titled “Responding to Covid-19: Highlights of a Survey in Zambia”.

In addition, the Ipsos report states: “One in four think Covid-19 can be cured with garlic (25 %), and sizeable minorities believe that Africans can’t get it (15%), or that drinking bleach cures it (9 %).

Some misconceptions cause needless anxiety. “I used to think that the virus only affects the elderly or those with underlying health ailments,” says Mercy Chilongo, 33, who had Covid-19 and recovered from it. “When I got Covid-19, I believed it was the end of me.”

In some cases, people have correct information about preventing infection, but cannot comply. According to Ipsos, social distancing may prove very difficult in a country where many people do not have separate rooms to isolate infected family members.

But many prevention measures are within the control of residents, who nonetheless are not using them. “The improper wearing of face masks, with citizens dropping the masks when talking or wearing their masks on their chins, or not observing physical distancing, is a battle we continue facing,” says Health Minister Chitalu Chilufya.


Derrick Silimina is a freelance journalist based in Lusaka.
derricksilimina@gmail.com

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

The Little Tuber of Wonders

By Derrick Silimina
 
The humble cassava – a long tuberous starchy root that must be cooked properly to be eaten safely – is getting new respect as a driver of agricultural development.

Cassava is Zambia’s second largest agricultural crop, after maize. Unlike maize, however, it does not require a lot of water – a big advantage in the drought-prone country. So the government and development organisations have launched efforts to find new markets for the tuber, in hopes that more of it will be grown.

Those efforts are paying off, and the solution is coming from an unexpected source: manufacturers. While household demand for the vegetable has been stagnant, industries making a variety of products – from starches and flour to prepared foods and beer – have been signing up to buy large quantities of cassava.

One such firm is Premiercon Starch Company, a local start-up producing starches and flours. Among other products, it turns cassava into a starchy feedstock that it sells to mining companies, which in turn use it to process minerals. The company has contracted with the Kalumbila Copper Mine to supply 7,000 metric tonnes of industrial starch per year.

Zambian Breweries, a locally owned firm that brews lagers and is a major bottler of Coca-Cola, is another firm that has signed contracts to buy large lots of cassava. The company buys dried cassava chips from smallholder farmers, processes the chips into flour and fermented cassava starch, and uses those as ingredients of its Eagle Lager beer.

Zambian Breweries wants to ensure a continued supply of cassava. So it has recruited 5,000 farmers to grow on average one hectare of cassava each, with assurances that it will buy their produce.

From the farmers’ perspective, the newly opened industrial markets solve a big problem. For example, farmer Amos Samapaze of North-Western Province found he could not rely on selling cassava to nearby villages, as demand was unpredictable and poor roads often impeded access.

“I started cultivating cassava when I lived in Lukulu district in Western Province,” he says. “I owned oxen, an ox-cart and a plough. But the lack of market in the area discouraged me; the produce would sometimes go to waste.”

The new industrial demand, in contrast, encourages some farmers to expand their operations. “I heard about companies supporting cassava farmers and decided last year to buy five hectares and produce cassava,” says Cosmas Muleya, a father of five from Gwembe in Southern Province. “Since cassava is drought resistant, I believe it will do fine here. I expect to harvest more than 80 bags of 50 kilograms each.”

Similarly, cassava farmer Ruth Chilenga started by selling cassava at Lusaka’s Soweto market, but plans to expand both to export markets in neighbouring countries – mainly Angola and the Democratic Republic of the Congo – and to industrial markets in Zambia.

The new industrial demand for cassava has also created jobs for intermediaries between farmers and industrial manufacturers. Elizabeth Kunda buys dried cassava from farmers in north-western Zambia for resale in bulk to Zambian Breweries. Farmers can focus on producing cassava while she deals with the industrial clients, she says.


Derrick Silimina is a freelance journalist based in Lusaka. He focuses on Zambian agriculture and sustainability issues.
derrick.silimina@gmail.com

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Travelling Close to Home

 

By Derrick Silimina 
 
The coronavirus crisis and its attendant travel restrictions are devastating the tourism sector worldwide, and Zambia’s industry is no exception.

Since travel restrictions entered into force in March 2020, Zambia’s flow of international arrivals has dwindled to virtually nothing. Many Zambian tour operators, hotel and restaurant owners, convention and festival organisers and sports event sponsors are facing very difficult times.

To replace some of the revenue lost as international visitors stay away, the Zambian industry is focusing on building a domestic tourism market. In October 2020, the first-ever Zambia travel conference was held at the Maramba River Lodge, four kilometres from Victoria Falls.

The conference in southern Zambia attracted over 150 tour operators and other industry members. It focused on how to encourage Zambians to travel within their own country. “It is very important that we meet like this and develop a plan to promote domestic tourism,” Eugene Mapuwo, the mayor of Livingstone told the meeting.

“We need to adopt online marketing strategies if the industry is to bounce back,” said Simone Layton, manager of the Shamba Lodge in Kitwe in north-central Zambia. “A lot of people in the industry are realising how devastating the pandemic has been to their business. Most weren’t prepared for it.”

The Zambia Tourism Agency, a government body, is developing tour packages geared to in-country travel, says marketing director Mwabashike ­Nkulukusa. “The agency is drafting a plan to help attract domestic travellers,” he says. “It must be an all-inclusive plan, including prices, products and how the packages will be promoted.”

Some delegates were sceptical of this strategy, pointing to insufficient disposable income in the domestic market. “We have tried to scale down our rates but local tourists still can’t afford to spend money for a holiday,” Walter Joe Syakalonga, director of Sigo Adventures and Tours, said in an interview.

Other industry members argued that the government should focus on easing their tax burdens. They cite requirements to pay 10 % to 15 % employment taxes on staff, plus 16 % value-added tax and a 1.5 % tourism levy. The levies add to their cost of doing business and discourage travel, they say.

So far, the government has helped somewhat by granting tour operators and hoteliers more time to pay income and value-added taxes. And officials are publicly encouraging domestic tourism. “I encourage all citizens to support the tourism industry while observing Covid-19 health guidelines,” Finance Minister Bwalya Ng’andu said in his 2021 national budget address.

Zambia in fact has a lot to offer tourists, wherever they come from. Aside from the famed Victoria Falls, Zambia is home to several other majestic falls and the mighty Zambezi River. Several national parks and game reserves offer opportunities for observing wildlife, whilst busy urban areas provide a window on the country’s diverse culture.

Zambia’s effort to boost domestic travel may provide ideas and best practices for tourism operators elsewhere. The worldwide tourism industry certainly needs all the help it can get. According to the World Travel and Tourism Council, an industry body, the global industry will shrink by up to 30 % in 2020, shedding some 50 million jobs.


Derrick Silimina is a freelance journalist based in Lusaka. He focuses on Zambian agriculture and sustainability issues.
derricksilimina@gmail.com

Chinese Proficiency Brings Job Opportunities to Zambians



A Chinese lecturer at a class at UNZA's Confucius Institute (Photos: Derrick Silimina)
 
 
By Derrick Silimina / 2020-12-09
 
Zambia's all-weather friendship with China, which dates back to over 50 years, has translated into massive progress in all sectors of the Southern African country's economic development.
 
As Africa's population increases, many young people are having trouble finding jobs that can improve their socio-economic situations. Owing to lack of formal jobs on the continent, many youths have to find an alternative in the informal sector in order to make ends meet. This traps them in a precarious employment situations, which contributes to a less than rosy transition to setting a foundation for their future.

Over 15 million young people in Africa, around 13.5 percent of the total labor force of 15-24 years, are facing unemployment and this rate is more than twice the unemployment rate of those aged 25 and over (6.1 percent), underlining that unemployment on the continent is hitting the younger generation hardest. Young women are even more severely affected, with an unemployment rate of 14.7 percent compared to 12.3 percent for young men, according to the Mo Ibrahim Foundation's 2019 Forum Report.

However, Zambia's all-weather friendship with China, which dates back to over 50 years, has translated into massive progress in all sectors of the Southern African country's economic development - be it in construction, health, education, and agriculture, among others.

Rising Chinese popularity

China's socio-economic, financial and cultural ties with Zambia have prompted the need for literacy in the Chinese language. While the Asian economic giant has expanded its exchanges in language and culture with African countries (and elsewhere) by supporting the establishment of Confucius Institutes and Confucius Classrooms, language education policies in Zambia has been proactive and receptive to the emerging needs and demands in Chinese language and culture.

Since China is a major trade partner and investor in Africa, many countries are encouraging their citizens to learn what is considered by many to be the language of the future. Zambia is no exception.

"Learning Chinese language motivates me to reach my goal in life. My aim, after I finish this course, is to become an accomplished interpreter knowing that the profession is currently in high demand among several Chinese companies in Zambia," said Armstrong Sezongo, a second-year Chinese language student at the Confucius Institute of the University of Zambia (UNZA).

Emelia Mwale, 36, an entrepreneur at Lusaka's Comesa Market, said the introduction of the Chinese language course in the country will open up opportunities for traders such as herself to do business effectively, as communication with her Chinese suppliers of goods is usually a challenge.

"I intend to enroll and study Chinese at the Confucius Institute at the UNZA. This language is vital and since we are in a global village, any commercial activity will be easier to undertake as I will be able to interact with my Chinese suppliers of goods effectively," said Mwale.

For this and other reasons, the growing popularity of the Chinese language among Zambian youths and the working population in the formal or informal sectors has inspired policymakers to include the language in the national curriculum for schools.

On May 7, 2019, the Zambian Government entered into an agreement with the Confucius Institute Headquarters of China to officially introduce the Chinese language as a taught and examinable subject at both junior and senior secondary school level.

The Ministry of Higher Education Permanent Secretary Mabvuto Sakala recently signed the agreement on behalf of the government at the Confucius Institute Headquarters in Beijing, China.

Meanwhile, Zambia's Ministry of General Education started implementing the teaching of Chinese as a foreign language in 10 pilot schools, which were carefully identified and selected in each province.

"The introduction of the Chinese language in the Zambian education system will not only strengthen the current bilateral relationship, but will also increase bilateral exchanges between the two countries," said Sakala.

Opportunities for the taking

Some stakeholders such as the Teaching Council of Zambia (TCZ) recently welcomed government's move, arguing that the introduction of the Chinese language should not scare Zambians, as it was a blessing to those students who have aspirations of studying in Chinese universities.

TCZ Registrar Ebby Mubanga said since Zambia is part of the global village, the introduction of the Chinese language is going to bring value to the country's education system.

 

Students at UNZA’s Confucius Institute during a Chinese lesson for 2020 academic year (Photos: Derrick Silimina)

Prior to this development, many Zambians who have expressed interest in learning Chinese language by virtue of their academic background while studying in China, have not only benefited from the country's academic excellence, but also its language which is spreading rapidly across the globe.

Locally, many students who graduated from the Confucius Institute and other Chinese schools in the country have earned themselves jobs as interpreters in key Chinese organizations, as well as at the Chinese Embassy in Lusaka.

For example, companies such as Hongsen Investment Ltd., a Chinese firm located in Lusaka's Makeni Industrial Area, which runs a manufacturing plant that recycles plastic bottles into finished plastic wares such as dishes, cups, hang sticks, sweeping brooms and buckets, has employed a Zambian youth Thandiwe Chaaba as its administration officer.

Thanks to her eloquence in the Chinese language, Chaaba has been running the company's local operations for over four years and also acts as a link between her employers, business clients and local people.

"I am so grateful to authorities who made it possible to introduce the learning of Chinese language in the country," said Chaaba.

Realizing the potential the Chinese language has in the local job market, Chaaba enrolled for a refresher course at the Confucius Institute in 2018, a move that earned her the current position after her graduation. Learning Chinese as a second or third language has been a global trend in the last few years. In Zambia, the rapid increase of Chinese investments and trade has spurred the move.

At UNZA's Confucius Institute, Chinese lessons for the 2020 academic year include level one to level six and students are taught from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. (daytime class) and 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. (evening class).

Confucius Institute Deputy Director Zhang Run said there are over 1,000 Chinese companies, both state-owned and private, who have investments in Zambia and the language gives most learners a boost when it comes to job offers.

"In fact, every day, these companies call for employees who can speak the Chinese language, which is an added advantage to doing administrative work, including human resources, secretarial work or even customer relations," said Zhang.

"The introduction of the Chinese language here is vital, as it will contribute to the development of Zambia and further enhance strong bilateral ties between our two countries, as well as help eliminate misunderstanding between the two peoples," said Zhang. 

Reporting from Zambia



Monday, November 16, 2020

Living off the Land


Nowadays

 

 
By Derrick Silimina
 
Before Covid-19 hit the world economy, and before new Zambian mining taxes in 2019 scared off a lot of international investors, the good times were rolling in Zambia’s mining regions.

North-Western Province, one of the main mining regions, enjoyed an unprecedented boom. Some $7 billion was invested in the Lumwana, Kansanshi and Sentinel mines and associated infrastructure over a 10-year period. An estimated 20,000 workers flocked to jobs in gold and copper mines, according to a 2018 report by Zambia’s Chamber of Mines.

Those workers and their families represented a rich market for a wide range of new businesses: everything from banks to transport firms, hotels, restaurants, retail stores and builders.

One of the sectors to benefit from the mining boom has been farming and trading in agricultural commodities. Entrepreneurs came to the province hoping to earn money by feeding the growing population. Many who could not find jobs in the mines – such as women and older workers – found work in farms and food processing businesses.

The new farmers found relatively little local competition. According to Moses Mwanakatwe, acting director of investments for the Zambia Development Agency, only 2.7 million hectares of the province’s 5.8 million hectares of arable land are being used for agriculture. His comments to an investment symposium were reported by the Lusaka Times in August 2019.

The region’s new farmers produce cassava (a nutty-flavoured, starchy root vegetable), maize, sorghum, beans, and sweet potatoes.

Tina Zulu from Chingola in the Copperbelt Province – about 200 kilometres east of Solwezi – is one of the mining region’s new farmers. In the 2019-2020 farming season she produced 48 bags of 50 kilograms each of maize from her five hectares of farmland.

In addition to selling her own produce, she plans to buy maize in Chingola for resale in Solwezi, where it fetches a higher price, particularly during the rainy season. According to Zulu, a 50 kilogram bag of maize fetches around 120 Kwacha (around €5.25) in Chingola, compared to 300 Kwacha in Solwezi. “Demand in the mining town (Solwezi) is high due to the increase in population, and that demand is still unmet by local supply,” she explains.

Another new farming entrepreneur is Solwezi native Susan Chipango, 45, who grows maize and raises chickens. She got the idea when she lived in a military compound while her husband was a soldier. “I learned a lot from a neighbour who raised chickens,” she says.

“Before my husband retired from the army in 2017, I grew peppercorns as a starter,” Chipango says. “I harvested 65 bags of 50 kgs each, and after I sold the grains, my passion for agriculture grew.” After her husband retired, the family moved back to Solwezi where Chipango focused on producing maize for the local market.

In future she hopes to expand her farm to 20 hectares and to raise fruits and vegetables, including cassava. “It is a sure way to create wealth and a lot better than waiting to be employed by the mines,” Chipango says.


Derrick Silimina is a freelance journalist based in Lusaka. He focuses on Zambian agriculture and sustainability issues.
derricksilimina@gmail.com

Friday, November 6, 2020

Rethinking Domestic Tourism



 

 

For many years, the hospitality, travel, tourism and events industries made the world go round and airplanes dominated the skies. That’s until they became a mode of transfer of the novel coronavirus. Movement between and within countries was restricted. National economies and the wider global economy have been in decline since then.

Although Zambia kept its borders open, the number of international visitors entering the country has declined sharply. The first three months of 2020 saw a drop of over 14,000 international visitors, according to research by the International Growth Centre.

The travel and tourism industry accounted for 10.4 percent of global GDP in 2019 but is expected to contract by 20 to 30 percent in 2020, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council.

In Zambia most of the exclusive tour operators who depend on foreign tourists are struggling to cope with the shutdown of global tourism and unfortunately some have had no choice but to close. Some tour operators argue that their colleagues in other countries in the region work under better conditions and that it is difficult to promote domestic tourism in Zambia due to the taxation system they are subject to.

As COVID-19 rages on, Zambia’s tourism industry is looking less profitable and it will never be the same again. The question is how best to market the country’s dwindling tourism potential now and after the pandemic, especially among domestic tourists.

A renowned tour operator in South Luangwa put it this way: “The taxes we pay are huge. For instance, we pay ten to 15 percent service charges to our staff, we have to pay 16 percent VAT to Zambia Revenue Authority and we have to pay 1.5 percent tourism levy to the Tourism Development Fund, which all adds to the high costs of operations. You add transport costs as it is nine hours’ drive from here to Lusaka making it difficult to stay afloat under domestic tourism.”

Radisson Blu Hotel General Manager Johan Klang said most of his guests, both local and international, are business professionals drawn to Lusaka for work. With economic activities in Zambia and abroad taking major hits this has meant fewer guests. “It’s been a difficult year with very few guests and some days we have been empty. However, the light at the end of the tunnel is getting a little bit stronger but it’s still very far away,” Klang said.

Domestic tourism has regularly been overlooked by local tour operators but now with international visits drying up thanks to COVID-19, travel agents, tour operators, hotels and lodges, among others, are now forced to re-orient their marketing towards locals in order to sustain their operations.

Without the usual number of international tourists many tour operators countrywide are now struggling to survive while others have closed down. “…at the moment, Zambians generally do not have the buying power to afford the facilities on offer. We have tried to scale down our rates in light of the effects of COVID-19 but as it is, they don’t come through and it’s quite sad that our local tourists can’t afford to spend for a holiday,” Sigo Adventures and Tours Executive Director Joe Walter said.

Some commentators contend that domestic tourism hasn’t thrived for a long time in Zambia because the act of exploring one’s own country for pleasure is not entrenched in the culture and most people were not raised to appreciate the value of going on a holiday. There is a noted increase in the number of local tourists attending music and beer festivals, as well as other social and cultural activities. However, under the new normal and social distancing guidelines it is difficult for tour operators to benefit from this at the moment. Having said this, experts maintain that promoting domestic tourism, which includes events such as weddings, matebetos, chilanga mulilos, traditional ceremonies, music festivals and conferences are vital to sustaining the industry.

Commenting on President Edgar Lungu recently announcing the partial reopening of bars and nightclubs (they had been closed for a period of six months to reduce the spread of coronavirus), Livingstone Tourism Association President Rodney Sikumba said, “We welcome the presidential directive as the idea will help resuscitate domestic tourism. Livingstone has really struggled in the sense that bars and restaurants were closed and basically the city was dead but now we will see life gradually getting back to normal, a plus for domestic tourism.” 

 

Zambia Tourism Agency Director of Marketing Mwabashinke Nkulunkusa stated that owners of exclusive tourist facilities that target international tourists need to revise their tourism rates in order to accommodate the domestic market.

“If you look at most of the facilities now, be it in South Luangwa, Lower Zambezi, Kafue National Park where most of these facilities that target international exclusive markets are located, you will find that they have drastically reduced their prices and some by more than 50 percent in order to attract domestic tourists. This is the only way they can sustain and pull through the storm of COVID-19 which has really caused havoc in the tourism industry,” Nkulunkusa told Nkwazi.

With virtually no international tourist arrivals since March 2020 due to travel restrictions and subdued domestic tourist activity following the ravaging effect of COVID-19, government has put in place relief measures such as time to pay agreement covering income tax and value added tax.

In his 2021 national budget presentation dubbed, “Stimulate Economic Recovery and Build Resilience to Safeguard Livelihoods and Protect the Vulnerable,” Finance Minister Bwalya Ng’andu announced additional relief measures that government will implement to revive the sector.

“To resuscitate the tourism sector and promote local tourism, I propose the following measures: Reduce corporate income tax rate to 15 percent from 35 percent on income earned by hotels and lodges on accommodation and food services; Suspend import duty on safari game viewing motor vehicles, tourist buses and coaches; Suspend license of renewal fees paid by hotels and lodges; Suspend the retention fees paid by tourism enterprises; and Suspend registration fees for hotel managers,” Dr Ng’andu stated.

The finance minister expressed optimism that domestic tourism has started to rise and encouraged citizens to continue supporting the tourism industry while observing the COVID-19 health guidelines.

 

Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Dethroning King Maize

 

  About Us | Noman Zamani

By Derrick Silimina

Zambia is reconsidering the priority it gives to maize as both a cash crop and dietary sta-ple. But in a culture where maize and food are nearly synonymous, diversifying crops and diets may be a tough sell. 

In Zambia, maize is by far the most impor-tant dietary staple and a main beneficiary of agricultural subsidies. But in coming years, maize may have to make room for compet-ing crops. 

Inonge Wina, Zambia’s vice-president, recently startled people by calling on them to vary their diets, eating less maize and more millet, sorghum, cassava, rice and sweet potatoes. “The switch to more nutri-tious foods is one of the low-cost and effec-tive ways of addressing stunting and malnu-trition in the country,” Wina said. 

Her proposal runs counter to Zambia’s culture. Zambians typically eat maize-based meals two or three times per day. Many do not consider themselves to have eaten at all if they have not eaten maize or something made of maize. Particularly popular is a stiff maize-based porridge known as nshima. Maize is also used to brew beer. 

The vice president’s comments come at a time when maize farmers face a host of other problems. Many of them see their costs going up, while the government-owned Food Reserve Agency (FRA), which buys their produce, continues to pay them a constant 110 kwacha (the equivalent of € 4.6) per 50 kilogramme bag of white maize. 

The Zambia National Farmers’ Un-ion (ZNFU) says the price should be raised to 130 kwacha, in view of farmers’ rising costs for fertilisers, seeds, chemicals, transport, electricity and labour.At the same time, a subsidy pro-gramme on which many maize farmers de-pend is failing to deliver necessary inputs like fertiliser or pesticides on time. 

“We are nearing the planting season and land prepa-ration is underway, but we still do not have the inputs we expected to get in July,” says Veronica Tembo, a small-scale farmer from Lusaka’s Chongwe district. “Farmers should only have to worry about when the rains will come, not about undelivered inputs.” 

The Zambia’s Farmers Input Support Programme (FISP) was launched by the government in 2002 to provide subsidised seeds and fertiliser to maize farmers and to involve private traders in the supply of inputs. 

In recent years the programme has been plagued by mismanagement and cor-ruption. At the same time, it has fostered dependency among farmers.

“Most small-scale farmers on FISP have been beneficiaries for over five years, even though they were meant to ‘gradu-ate’ to self-sufficiency after two years, says Robert Tembo, a farmer in Chipata, eastern Zambia. 

He adds that some politicians use FISP to gain favour with voters and stay in power.On the other hand, the ZNFU wants more farmers to benefit from FISP. 

“Of the 3.3 million metric tonnes of maize pro-duced, 1.3 million are grown by small-scale farmers who do not benefit from FISP,” says ZNFU spokesman Calvin Kaleyi. “With the FRA prices at 110 kwacha, maize farmers will be bankrupted and production will de-cline next year.” 

Producers of other cereals, vegetables and fruits, meanwhile, are vying for a piece of the FISP action. “We too need subsidised inputs, just as maize farmers do,” says Monde Sitwala, a rice farmer from Mongu district. “The government should recognise rice as a profitable smallholder cash crop and a major contributor to national food se-curity.” 

When this essay was finalised in mid-October, however, Zambia seemed to be close to a severe financial crisis because of high foreign indebtedness. How that crisis might play out, and how it would affect gov-ernment capacities was anybody’s guess.

 IMPROVING DIETS 

The debate over priority treatment for maize takes place against a backdrop of widespread malnutrition in Zambia. According to the International Institute for Environment and Photo: Sean Sprague/LineairMany farmers use very simple technology.

 

 Funds Not Yet Released For The Farming Inputs - Phoenix FM

Development (IIED), an independent think tank based in London, the country’s heavy emphasis on eating maize is the reason why Zambia has one of the world’s highest rates of undernourishment. More than a third of children under five have stunted growth, and a quarter of adults are obese, the report says. 

Similarly, the UN Development Pro-gramme’s 2019 Human Development Index shows that 48 % of Zambians cannot meet their minimum calorie requirements. 

The Index ranks Zambia 143rd out of 189 coun-tries in terms of key indicators of human development.

According to IIED author William Chilufya, the large amount of land devoted to maize contributes to poverty, both be-cause maize fetches low prices and because it does not lend itself to many value-added agro-processing, trading and input supply activities. 

That limits the cereal’s economic multiplier effects.In part, Zambia’s over-reliance on maize leads to poverty because it produces maize inefficiently, using outdated farming techniques. Most small-scale farmers use traditional tools and depend on rain, mak-ing them vulnerable to natural disasters and increasingly erratic weather due to the climate crisis. 

Rising average temperatures have caused severe food shortages for 1.7 million Zambians, or 18 % of the population, the IIED reckons.The link between poverty and over-reliance on maize can also be traced to the health effects of an unvaried diet. 

While Zambia is focused on producing and con-suming maize, other cash crops – including soybeans, rice, cassava, beans plus vegeta-bles and fruits – receive too little invest-ment and too little attention from consum-ers. 

Cotton and tobacco are important cash crops too, though they have no impact on people’s nutrition.The government is trying to allocate more resources to building infrastructure and conducting research and development for a range of other crops. 

Of particular cur-rent policy interest is cassava, a starchy tu-berous root vegetable and major source of carbohydrates. 

“Cassava is a game changer in light of climate change,” says Veronica Chimuku, a cassava producer from the Kaoma district of western Zambia. “It is more drought-resistant than other crops that depend on rain-fed agriculture.” 

REORDERING PRIORITIES 

Convincing Zambians to substitute other foods for maize may be more difficult than changing national investment priorities, however. 

With over 60 % of Zambians living below the poverty line, varying diets may simply be too expensive.

 iDE | Supporting small-scale agriculture and finance options in Zambia

The Jesuit Cen-tre for Theological Reflection, an advocacy group for the poor, estimates that a varied basket of foods meeting nutrition require-ments would cost 7,000 kwacha (€ 296) per month – putting it out of the reach of most households.For the government, this means that a public information campaign – plus perhaps more subsidies for other crops, aimed at reducing their market prices – is in order. 

The government has made a start in this direction, correctly targeting agri-culture as a priority sector for investment. But a sharper focus on which specific com-modities to single out for support may also be needed. 

Two-thirds of Zambia’s population live in rural areas and rely on agriculture for income, making investment in agricul-ture particularly necessary. Agriculture ac-counts for only 20 % of Zambia’s GDP but could be a major source of growth, given the country’s abundant fertile land and good rainfall. 

Throughout sub-Saharan Africa, growth in agriculture reduces poverty up to 11 times faster than growth in other sec-tors, according to the International Fund for Agricultural Development, a specialised UN agency. 

Diversifying crops and investing in ag-ricultural infrastructure may not be a mira-cle cure for Zambia’s ailing economy and malnourished population. But they offer a promising way out of some of the country’s most pressing current problems. 

FURTHER READINGChilufya, W., 2019: Beyond maize; exploring agricultural diversification in Zambia. London, IIED. https://www.iied.org/beyond-maize-exploring-agricultural-diversification-zambia