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5 - Land Tenure and Changing Responses to the Agrarian Question

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 September 2023

Tom Lavers
Affiliation:
University of Manchester

Summary

Chapter 5 examines the EPRDF’s changing approach to agricultural development and the agrarian question. The EPRDF’s initial strategy was rooted in the TPLF’s focus on the peasant majority as its political base. The government sought to secure the acquiescence of the peasantry through the distribution of land, while agricultural inputs would raise agricultural productivity and generate a surplus that could finance industrial expansion, creating mass employment and alleviating pressure on rural land. The political crises of the early 2000s forced a re-evaluation of this agriculture-first approach, however. Faced with growing land shortages, the government sought to raise productivity at the cost of inequality and differentiation. The chapter examines, first, the government’s focus on high potential smallholders; and, second, the selective expropriation of peasant producers to make way for agricultural investments. While this strategy ultimately delivered rising agricultural productivity, a combination of population growth, displacement for investments and growing market forces eroded the main means of mass distribution and political control – access to land.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 5.1 Estimated humanitarian requirements

Source: author, based on Joint Government and Humanitarian Partners’ Documents, various years.
Figure 1

Figure 5.2 Rural and urban population

Source: author, based on World Development Indicators.
Figure 2

Figure 5.3 Crop land per economically active person in agriculture

Source: author, based on FAOStat.
Figure 3

Figure 5.4 Households by landholdingsNotes: The sample for this graph is limited to rural households with some involvement in agricultural activities such as crop or livestock production.

Source: author, based on World Bank/CSA Socioeconomic Survey, Wave 3, 2015–2016.
Figure 4

Figure 5.5 Method of acquisition for plots with land certificates by ageNotes: The vertical line at age 43 estimates the minimum age of those eligible to receive land at the time of the last land redistribution. The survey was conducted in 2015. So, in most of the country those aged 43 in 2015 would have been 18 in 1990 and potentially eligible to receive land. In Amhara, anyone aged 36 or over in 2015 would have been 18 in 1997 and potentially eligible. The dashed line representing the proportion of land that was state allocated is a five-year rolling average.

Source: author, based on World Bank/CSA Socioeconomic Survey, Wave 3, 2015–2016.
Figure 5

Figure 5.6 Distribution of primary decision-makers on land and rural population by ageNotes: As in the previous graph, the vertical line at age 43 is an estimate of the minimum age of those eligible to receive land in the last redistribution. The exact age differs in Amhara and depending on the exact timing of the last redistribution in each locality. The dashed line representing landholders as a proportion of total population is a five-year rolling average.

Source: author, based on World Bank Socioeconomic Survey, Wave 3, 2015–2016.
Figure 6

Figure 5.7 Prevalence of land rental by initial landholding size

Source: author, based on World Bank Socioeconomic Survey, Wave 3, 2015–2016.
Figure 7

Figure 5.8 Government and donor spending on agriculture

Source: author, based on ReSAKSS (Regional Strategic Analysts and Knowledge Support System). 2020. www.resakss.org.
Figure 8

Figure 5.9 Access to extension services

Source: author, based on CSA Agricultural Sample Survey, Volume III, various years.
Figure 9

Figure 5.10 Utilisation of improved agricultural inputs

Source: author, based on CSA Agricultural Sample Survey, Volume III, various years.
Figure 10

Figure 5.11 Cereal production

Source: author, based on CSA Agricultural Sample Survey, Volume I, various years.
Figure 11

Figure 5.12 Yield for major cereal cropsNote: no data are available for 2003. Drought likely had a major detrimental effect on yields.

Source: author, based on CSA Agricultural Sample Survey, Volume I, various years.
Figure 12

Figure 5.13 Access to agricultural inputs by landholding sizeNote: data on cooperatives is based on whether the farmer got improved seeds from a cooperative, since the survey did not ask about cooperative membership.

Source: author, based on World Bank Socioeconomic Survey, Wave 3, 2015–2016.
Figure 13

Figure 5.14 Outcomes from agriculture

Source: author, based on World Bank Socioeconomic Survey, Wave 3, 2015–2016.
Figure 14

Figure 5.15 Area under commercial farms by zone

Source: author calculations based on CSA 2014, Large and Medium Scale Commercial Farms Sample Survey.

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