This study assesses changes over the past decade in the farm size distributions of Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania and Zambia. Among all farms below 100 hectares in size, the share of land on small-scale holdings under five hectares has declined except in Kenya. Medium-scale farms (defined here as farm holdings between five and 100 hectares) account for a rising share of total farmland, especially in the 10 to 100 hectare range where the number of these farms is growing especially rapidly. Medium-scale farms control roughly 20% of total farmland in Kenya, 32% in Ghana, 39% in Tanzania, and over 50% in Zambia. The rapid rise of medium-scale holdings in most cases reflects increased interest in land by urban-based professionals or influential rural people. About half of these farmers obtained their land later in life, financed by non-farm income. The rise of medium-scale farms is affecting the region in diverse ways that are difficult to generalize. Many such farms are a source of dynamism, technical change and commercialization of African agriculture. However, medium-scale land acquisitions may exacerbate land scarcity in rural areas, which could have important effects given the projected 60% increase in rural Africa's population between 2015 and 2050. Medium-scale farmers tend to dominate farm lobby groups and influence agricultural policies and public expenditures to agriculture in their favor. Nationally representative Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data from six countries (Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Tanzania and Zambia) show that urban households own 5% to 35% of total agricultural land and that this share is rising in all countries where DHS surveys were repeated. This suggests a new and hitherto unrecognized channel by which medium-scale farmers may be altering the strength and location of agricultural growth and employment multipliers between rural and urban areas. Given current trends, medium-scale farms are likely to soon become the dominant scale of farming in many African countries.
Medium-scale farms have become a major force in Malawi's agricultural sector. Malawi's most recent official agricultural survey indicates that these account for over a quarter of all land under cultivation in Malawi. This study explores the causes and multifaceted consequences of the rising importance of medium-scale farms in Malawi. We identify the characteristics and pathways of entry into farming based on surveys of 300 medium-scale farmers undertaken in 2014 in the districts of Mchinji, Kasungu and Lilongwe. The area of land acquired by medium-scale farmers in these three districts is found to have almost doubled between 2000 and 2015. Just over half of the medium-scale farmers represent cases of successful expansion out of small-scale farming status; the other significant proportion of medium-scale farmers are found to be urban-based professionals, entrepreneurs and/or civil servants who acquired land, some very recently, and started farming in mid-life. We also find that a significant portion of the land acquired by medium-scale farmers was utilized by others prior to acquisition, that most of the acquired land was under customary tenure, and that the current owners were often successful in transferring the ownership structure of the acquired land to a long-term leaseholding with a title deed. The study finds that, instead of just strong endogenous growth of small-scale famers as a route for the emergence of medium-scale farms, significant farm consolidation is occurring through land acquisitions, often by urban-based people. The effects of farmland acquisitions by domestic investors on the country's primary development goals, such as food security, poverty reduction and employment, are not yet clear, though some trends appear to be emerging. We consider future research questions that may more fully shed light on the implications of policies that would continue to promote land acquisitions by medium-scale farms.
This report is one of four reports in the series of policy reports from the Business Experience Exchange Programme. It analyses the role of rural producer organisations in national policy development and the influence of national policy on the development of the rural institutions in Malawi.
This paper traces, through literature review, the evolution of forestry policies from the pre-colonial period to the current democratic era in order to assess (a) forestry policy formulation and implementation and (b) local community responses to these policies. Present forestry policies evolved from unrecorded regulations during the pre-colonial period whereby traditional leaders regulated the extraction of forestry resources. Specifically, traditional leaders preserved certain forest species with medicinal values and prohibited cutting down of trees in reserved forest patches considered as sacred places. In the colonial period, the forestry sector was guided by agricultural sector policies, which also extended to include forestry. However, within specific areas of forestry, "forestry Ordinances" were used as a tool to guide the management, protection, control and utilization of forestry resources. These Ordinances were regularly reviewed to respond to new and changing demands of the forestry sector. The coherent forestry policy was, however, developed after Malawi attained its independence in 1964. In general, policies pursued between the colonial periods and prior to the Structural Adjustment Programme prohibited local community participation in forestry matters. However, during the current democracy era, the present policy advocates community participation in forestry matters, a concept that was introduced by the colonial government in the 1926s. This suggests that policies that governed the forestry sector in the colonial period have, to a certain extent, shaped the current status of the forestry sector.
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