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close this bookThe Crisis in African Agriculture - Studies in African Political Economy (UNU, 1987, 99 pages)
View the document(introductory text...)
View the documentAcknowledgements
View the documentForeword
View the documentPreface
View the documentIntroduction
close this folder1: The performance of African agriculture, 1950-1980
View the documentBasic data and broad trends
View the documentAgricultural situation
View the documentConclusion
View the document2: Precolonial African societies
View the document3: The appropriation of peasant surplus labour
View the document4: The export-oriented system
close this folder5: The second post-independence decade: The food crisis
View the document(introductory text...)
View the documentSmallholder development projects
View the documentThe basic needs strategy
View the documentAgrarian reform
View the documentMore credit facilities
View the documentWater supply
View the documentThe basic needs strategy in the current capitalist crisis
View the document6: Forms of control
close this folder7: The alternative and its prerequisites
View the document(introductory text...)
View the documentEvolution of social stratification in the African states which achieved independence in the 1960s
View the documentWhat popular alliance for the alternative?
View the documentWhat national popular programme might the popular alliance propose?
View the documentThe rural areas
View the documentThe urban areas
View the documentOrganizing the suggestions
View the documentConclusion
close this folderAppendix: Complaints of the rice-growers of San (Mali)
View the documentReport on the alarming situation in field B of San-West
View the documentSelected bibliography

Conclusion

In the preceding sections we have endeavoured to present in figures a very worrying situation: the significant backwardness of African agriculture compared to that of other regions of the world and, above all, the growing difficulty that this agriculture experiences in being able to feed the peoples of the continent.

Except for a few mineral- or oil-producing countries, in general development policy in Africa has consisted, and consists, in extracting resources from agriculture in order to finance the rest of the economy. This has meant that in the agricultural sector, efforts were for a long time concentrated solely on products for which there is a demand on the world market. From the colonial period down to the present day, this policy has led to a continual decline in the capacity to produce local foodstuffs in order to satisfy food requirements. The consequences of the strategies and policies that underpinned these development options reached their critical threshold in the early 1970s. The great famines that struck much of the region at that time simply revealed explosively a crisis situation that had in fact existed, at least latently, since the first contacts, or more accurately the first clashes, between capitalist systems and African traditional systems, essentially based on subsistence.

Table 9 Africa. Daily per caput calorie supply as percentage of requirements1


Average 1969-71

Average 1972-74

Average 1975-77

North Africa:

89

101

105

Algeria

79

89

98

Sahel:

89

82

87

Chad

88

76

75

West Africa:

97

95

95

Guinea

89

85

83

Central Africa:

95

96

99

Angola

85

86

88

East and Southern Africa:

94

93

94

Mozambique

88

85

82

Total Africa region

93

93

94

Other countries2:

102

105

108

Somalia

96

96

92

1National food requirements are expressed in calories and are based on the approximate energy needs of working adults, taking account of height, age distribution and ecological factors.

2Invited members of the UN Economic Commission for Africa but not belonging to the regional conference.

In order to understand properly the nature of the crisis which is today assuming tragic dimensions, it is necessary to go back to the precolonial socioeconomic formations to try and understand the nature of the modes of production that developed there, how the capitalist mode of production acted on those precapitalist modes, the forms of extortion of surplus peasant labour that that gave rise to, the social stratifications and class relations that flowed from all this, and the economic basis on which these social relations were consolidated.

This is the only way to understand the negative evolution, occurring before our very eyes, of the economic situation of most African countries and also be able, if not to draw up programmes for alternative policies, at least to reflect on the conditions and possibilities of these alternatives.

Notes

1. H. Mendras and Y. Tavernier (eds.), Terre, paysans et politique, 3 vols. (Paris, Futurible S.E.D.E.I.S., 1969).

2. Ibid., pp. 256 and 257.

3. This process is well explained by Suzanne Berger in Terre, paysans et politique.

4. Studies of Trends in World Supply and Demand of Major Agricultural Commodities (Paris, OECD, 1976).