BOOK REVIEW HARVESTS UNDER FIRE Harvests Under Fire: Regional
Cooperation for Food Security in Southern Africa By Carol B. Thompson London:
Zed Books, 1991 176 pp. Reviewed by Stephen Dear IN HARVESTS UNDER FIRE:
Regional Cooperation for Food Security in Southern Africa, Carol B. Thompson
admits that the pervasiveness of the human suffering experienced throughout
Southern Africa in the past decade makes any attempt to analyze regional
efforts at development "almost arrogant." From the tens of thousands dead
from malnutrition and South African- and US- supported armed aggression
in Mozambique, Angola, Namibia and elsewhere in the region to the pain
that led to food riots in Zambia, most of the people living in Southern
Africa had little reason during the 1980s to feel optimistic about an improving
quality of life. But it is during these years, Thompson argues, that one
of the most successful experiments in regional economic cooperation has
begun: the Southern African Development Coordination Conference. Since
its inception in 1980, SADCC has sought to promote strategies resistant
to South African hegemony in the region and conducive to mutually beneficial
development projects among its members. SADCC brings together 10 widely
divergent states-- Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia,
Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe--to focus on planning for addressing
commonly shared national interests such as improved communications, transportation,
food and agricultural cooperation, mining, industry, trade relations and
financial integration. With a highly decentralized structure, SADCC relies
upon consensus of agreement on policy choices and upon each member state
to be responsible for coordinating those choices in one economic sector
of the region. For example, Zimbabwe administers agricultural programs,
Tanzania, industry and trade, and Angola, energy conservation and development.
Thompson's book analyzes SADCC's attempts to promote food security against
both an often overwhelming legacy of colonialism and attempts by South
Africa and the United States and other Western interests to shape the region's
future using the old theories of directed development: large-scale farming
operations with cash crops, unbalanced comparative advantage, highly restrictive
loan and grant packages and the like. Thompson seems optimistic that SADCC's
first decade shows that it has the potential to meet many of these challenges.
SADCC was founded with the idea that the region can break out of its subordinate
role to South Africa and at the same time redefine the region's role in
the global economy from that of a producer of unprocessed minerals and
agricultural commodities to an exporter of food crops and energy. SADCC,
Thompson argues, has promoted improved food distribution and an agro-industry
that produces for the basic needs of food, clothing and housing. In so
doing it has provoked a change in the status quo that has prevailed for
over a century. With examples from throughout the region, Thompson describes
how skilled and relatively prosperous African farmers were turned into
subsistence and sub-subsistence tillers while the white large-scale commercial
farm sector prospered for decades, using the best land and African labor.
The result, Thompson writes, was the overpopulated areas, unsophisticated
production techniques, infertile soil, deforestation, lack of hybrid seeds
for traditional crops and lack of irrigation that still pervade the region.
These arrangements intensified the exploitation of women in Southern Africa,
prohibited prospects for free market exchanges, increased social divisions
among Africans and underdeveloped the factors of production. Every country
in Southern Africa, including South Africa, remains a primary commodity
exporter today. The strength of Thompson's book lies in its assessments
of the current pressures against attempts to implement alternative modes
of development across the region and of the extent to which SADCC has succeeded
despite those pressures. Most of Harvests Under Fire is an analysis of
the external forces acting against SADCC's programs in food security; the
book looks at the core issue of politics of food production and distribution
rather than techniques of agriculture and economics. South Africa and the
United States have been the key antagonists in these politics. In particular,
the U.S. Agency for International Development's influence on SADCC appears
to be rising while it urges SADCC to emphasize certain themes whose benefits
to SADCC are questionable. They include: the creation of "master farmers"
using high technologies for specialized farming (with the effect of diminishing
land reform), specialization of production (which could benefit the stronger
economies, such as Zimbabwe, and hurt the weaker ones), the promotion of
cash crops (often in place of food crops) and the promotion of hybrid research
(which can bring more equity problems). U.S. actions regarding SADCC, Thompson
argues, are laying the groundwork for a free South Africa to continue to
dominate the region. SADCC's goals, Thompson writes, "although modest and
logical when viewed historically, are a major challenge to the international
economic status quo." SADCC programs are oriented to decrease the region's
dependence on South Africa and to promote a rationalized regional division
of labor. One goal is to coordinate the production of some goods. For example,
Swaziland will produce low-cost tractors and Tanzania conventional tractors
for the entire region. SADCC members also aim to share agricultural technology
and information, engage in joint research programs, train farmers throughout
the region and encourage more processing of food to take place in Southern
Africa. SADCC programs target smaller farmers, reflecting most member countries'
commitment to small farmers; while national policies vary considerably,
only in Malawi and Swaziland, Thompson reports, have local ruling classes
joined forces with foreign interests to expand corporate holdings. With
Harvests Under Fire, Thompson shows that in its first decade, SADCC has
successfully promoted the region, both locally and internationally, and
has learned to begin to set its own priorities in the face of strong and
opposing interests. Whether Southern Africa can move toward self-sufficiency
will become more apparent during the 1990s as SADCC continues to evolve
and begins to define a relationship with South Africa during this crucial
time in that nation's history. Those interested in alternative development
schemes should watch SADCC. Though somewhat dry, Harvests Under Fire provides
a useful, sympathetic but critical, interim report.