Ethiopia Agriculture
Figure 9. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by Sector,
Ethiopian Fiscal Year 1984/85
Accounting for over 40 percent of GDP, 80 percent of
exports, and 80 percent of the labor force, agriculture
remained in 1991 the economy's most important sector (see
fig. 9). Ethiopia has
great
agricultural potential because
of its vast areas of fertile land, diverse climate,
generally adequate rainfall, and large labor pool. Despite
this potential, however, Ethiopian agriculture has remained
underdeveloped. Because of drought, which has persistently
affected the country since the early 1970s, a poor economic
base (low productivity, weak infrastructure, and low level
of technology), and the Mengistu government's commitment to
Marxism-Leninism, the agricultural sector has performed
poorly. For instance, according to the World Bank, between
l980 and l987 agricultural production dropped at an annual
rate of 2.l percent, while the population grew at an annual
rate of 2.4 percent. Consequently, the country faced a
tragic famine that resulted in the death of nearly 1 million
people from l984 to 1986.
During the imperial period, the development of the
agricultural sector was retarded by a number of factors,
including tenancy and land reform problems, the government's
neglect of the agricultural sector (agriculture received
less than 2 percent of budget allocations even though the
vast majority of the population depended on agriculture),
low productivity, and lack of technological development.
Moreover, the emperor's inability to implement meaningful
land reform perpetuated a system in which aristocrats and
the church owned most of the farmland and in which most
farmers were tenants who had to provide as much as 50
percent of their crops as rent. To make matters worse,
during the 1972-74 drought and famine the imperial
government refused to assist rural Ethiopians and tried to
cover up the crisis by refusing international aid. As a
result, up to 200,000 Ethiopians perished.
Although the issue of land reform was not addressed until
the l974 revolution, the government had tried to introduce
programs to improve the condition of farmers. In 1971 the
Ministry of Agriculture introduced the Minimum Package
Program (MPP) to bring about economic and social changes.
The MPP included credit for the purchase of items such as
fertilizers, improved seeds, and pesticides; innovative
extension services; the establishment of cooperatives; and
the provision of infrastructure, mainly water supply and
all-weather roads. The program, designed for rural
development, was first introduced in a project called the
Chilalo Agricultural Development Unit (CADU). The program
later facilitated the establishment of similar
internationally supported and financed projects at Ada (just
south of Addis Ababa), Welamo, and Humera. By l974 the
Ministry of Agriculture's Extension and Project
Implementation Department (EPID) had more than twenty-eight
areas with more than 200 extension and marketing centers.
Although the MPPs improved the agricultural productivity of
farmers, particularly in the project areas, there were many
problems associated with discrimination against small
farmers (because of a restrictive credit system that favored
big landowners) and tenant eviction.
Imperial government policy permitting investors to import
fertilizers, pesticides, tractors and combines, and (until
1973) fuel free of import duties encouraged the rapid
expansion of large-scale commercial farming. As a result,
agriculture continued to grow, albeit below the population
growth rate. According to the World Bank, agricultural
production increased at an average annual rate of 2.l
percent between l965 and 1973, while population increased at
an average annual rate of 2.6 percent during the same
period.
Agricultural productivity under the Derg continued to
decline. According to the World Bank, agricultural
production increased at an average annual rate of 0.6
percent between 1973 and 1980 but then decreased at an
average annual rate of 2.1 percent between l980 and l987.
During the same period (l973-87), population increased at an
average annual rate of 2.6 percent (2.4 percent for 1980-
87). The poor performance of agriculture was related to
several factors, including drought; a government policy of
controlling prices and the free movement of agricultural
products from surplus to deficit areas; the unstable
political climate; the dislocation of the rural community
caused by resettlement, villagization, and conscription of
young farmers to meet military obligations; land tenure
difficulties and the problem of land fragmentation; the lack
of resources such as farm equipment, better seeds, and
fertilizers; and the overall low level of technology.
President Mengistu's 1990 decision to allow free movement
of goods, to lift price controls, and to provide farmers
with security of tenure was designed to reverse the decline
in Ethiopia's agricultural sector. There was much debate as
to whether or not these reforms were genuine and how
effectively they could be implemented. Nonetheless,
agricultural output rose by an estimated 3 percent in 1990-
91, almost certainly in response to the relaxation of
government regulation. This modest increase, however, was
not enough to offset a general decrease in GDP during the
same period.
Data as of 1991
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