Deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of Zimbabwe: is it due to agricultural policies?

Deforestation and woodland degradation are issues of great concern in Zimbabwe. Debate on these issues has identified a number of causes including expansion of arable land, demand for fuel-wood and construction poles, and urban expansion. This paper examined how some policies aimed at improving agri...

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Autores principales: Chipika, J.T., Kowero, G.S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18129
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author Chipika, J.T.
Kowero, G.S.
author_browse Chipika, J.T.
Kowero, G.S.
author_facet Chipika, J.T.
Kowero, G.S.
author_sort Chipika, J.T.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Deforestation and woodland degradation are issues of great concern in Zimbabwe. Debate on these issues has identified a number of causes including expansion of arable land, demand for fuel-wood and construction poles, and urban expansion. This paper examined how some policies aimed at improving agricultural production may be contributing to deforestation of woodlands in the communal and resettlement areas of Zimbabwe. Consideration was given to crops with appreciable land area in 1980-90; maize (Zea mays L.), cotton (Gosspium hirsutum L.) and sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.). Regression analysis indicated that policies that improved marketing of grains, provision of credit (largely in form of farm inputs) and extension services, encouraged expansion of land under maize and less so under cotton. High nominal prices encouraged expansion of area under maize while decreasing real prices of cotton, if not reserved, had potential for reducing land under cotton. Increased fertiliser prices, through removal of subsidies as required by structural adjustment policies, had potential for reducing land under maize and sunflower. The driving force for sunflower and cotton production was partly based on the desire, by farmers, for non-declining revenues in successive years. During the same period, real producer prices for these crops were declining and demand for cash was increasing rapidly. The evaluated agricultural policies may have been responsible for moderate expansion of land area under maize but more significant expansion of land under cotton and sunflower. These policies could have encouraged modest deforestation of woodlands in the Zimbabwean communal and resettlement areas in the period 1980-1995.
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spelling CGSpace181292025-01-24T14:20:13Z Deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of Zimbabwe: is it due to agricultural policies? Chipika, J.T. Kowero, G.S. deforestation land use woodlands crop production agricultural policy cotton maize sunflowers prices Deforestation and woodland degradation are issues of great concern in Zimbabwe. Debate on these issues has identified a number of causes including expansion of arable land, demand for fuel-wood and construction poles, and urban expansion. This paper examined how some policies aimed at improving agricultural production may be contributing to deforestation of woodlands in the communal and resettlement areas of Zimbabwe. Consideration was given to crops with appreciable land area in 1980-90; maize (Zea mays L.), cotton (Gosspium hirsutum L.) and sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.). Regression analysis indicated that policies that improved marketing of grains, provision of credit (largely in form of farm inputs) and extension services, encouraged expansion of land under maize and less so under cotton. High nominal prices encouraged expansion of area under maize while decreasing real prices of cotton, if not reserved, had potential for reducing land under cotton. Increased fertiliser prices, through removal of subsidies as required by structural adjustment policies, had potential for reducing land under maize and sunflower. The driving force for sunflower and cotton production was partly based on the desire, by farmers, for non-declining revenues in successive years. During the same period, real producer prices for these crops were declining and demand for cash was increasing rapidly. The evaluated agricultural policies may have been responsible for moderate expansion of land area under maize but more significant expansion of land under cotton and sunflower. These policies could have encouraged modest deforestation of woodlands in the Zimbabwean communal and resettlement areas in the period 1980-1995. 2000 2012-06-04T09:06:07Z 2012-06-04T09:06:07Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18129 en Chipika, J.T., Kowero, G. 2000. Deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of Zimbabwe: is it due to agricultural policies? . Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 79 :175-185. ISSN: 0167-8809.
spellingShingle deforestation
land use
woodlands
crop production
agricultural policy
cotton
maize
sunflowers
prices
Chipika, J.T.
Kowero, G.S.
Deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of Zimbabwe: is it due to agricultural policies?
title Deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of Zimbabwe: is it due to agricultural policies?
title_full Deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of Zimbabwe: is it due to agricultural policies?
title_fullStr Deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of Zimbabwe: is it due to agricultural policies?
title_full_unstemmed Deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of Zimbabwe: is it due to agricultural policies?
title_short Deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of Zimbabwe: is it due to agricultural policies?
title_sort deforestation of woodlands in communal areas of zimbabwe is it due to agricultural policies
topic deforestation
land use
woodlands
crop production
agricultural policy
cotton
maize
sunflowers
prices
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18129
work_keys_str_mv AT chipikajt deforestationofwoodlandsincommunalareasofzimbabweisitduetoagriculturalpolicies
AT kowerogs deforestationofwoodlandsincommunalareasofzimbabweisitduetoagriculturalpolicies