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The Food
Emergency in Ethiopia: What the Drought Conceals
Fabrice Weissman
22 April 2003 (HPN) - According to the
Ethiopian Prime Minister and the United Nations (UN) food agencies, around 11
million people in Ethiopia will face serious food shortages
in 2003 as a result of ‘drought’. Unless the international
community provides one and one-half million tons of food
aid, Ethiopia will allegedly be the scene of ‘mass
starvation’.
This appeal, relayed by the majority of humanitarian
organizations, comes barely three years after Ethiopia
declared that it was on the brink of a famine ‘rivalling
that of 1984–85’. While at war with Eritrea and engaged in
a crucial election period, Addis Ababa claimed in 2000 that
a serious drought threatened the lives of 10.5 million people.
As a result of an intense advocacy campaign involving the
Western media, the UN, nearly all NGOs, and even Sir Bob
Geldof, donors gave the government one of the highest
volumes of assistance in its history: 1.2 million tons of food.
Despite this substantial aid, several thousand Ethiopian
Somalis died of hunger in the Ogaden region because they did
not receive sufficient relief.
The rapid succession of these appeals and the mixed results
of previous aid operations raises the question of whether it
is Ethiopia’s climate that condemns the country to regular
famines, or whether the priorities and policies of the
government are partly to blame.
A real risk of famine
There is a real risk of famine in Ethiopia. Commercial food
imports are limited by economic constraints and the country
has to rely on its own agricultural production to feed its
people.
Yet the farming sector has difficulty keeping up with
demographic growth. The Ethiopian population doubled between
1969 and 1999, but the five-year average of cereal and
pulses production rose by only 50 percent. After a significant drop
in the 1980s, per capita production has now recovered to
levels comparable to the 1960s. However, there are periodic
downturns (as in 2002–03), and output just meets national
demand: assuming that all the food available in Ethiopia
were equitably distributed, the country would be
experiencing moderate but widespread scarcity, even in
‘good’ years.
In reality, however, the entire population does not pay the
price of the national food deficit; rather, it is the
politically- and economically-marginalized communities that
face a growing inability to cover their food needs even when
they receive good rains.
These include sedentary farmers in the highlands who live in
densely-populated areas where there are few job
opportunities. Their small agricultural plots (less than 0.5
hectare) are situated on rocky soil prone to erosion and in zones
particularly vulnerable to climatic hazards.
For some years, small farmers in Tigray (East and Center),
Wollo, Wag Hamra and Hararghe have experienced regular food
shortages, obliging them progressively to deplete their
meager capital. Caught in a spiral of pauperization, they
are becoming structurally dependent on outside food aid. A
well documented study by SCF-UK in Wollo, for instance, shows
that the proportion of households with no animal holdings
doubled between 1996 and 2000 (rising from 15 to 20 percent to more
than 30 to 40 percent).
Nomadic communities on the arid and semi-arid plains
surrounding the Abyssinian plateaus are also exposed to a
high risk of famine. For the last few years, the nomadic
economy has been experiencing a deepening crisis caused,
among other things, by the encroachment of farmland on
grazing areas; obstructions to pastoral migration; the
increasing scarcity of fodder; and the disappearance of
caravan trading.
The experience of the Afars, one of the main victims of the
2003 food shortages, is a good example. The development of
cotton growing on state farms in the Awash valley has
considerably reduced traditional grazing areas and
encroached on fallback pasture formerly used during
droughts. At times of low rainfall, the irrigation of cotton
fields deprives sedentarized agro-pastoral communities
downstream of the water they need for the crops.
In addition, there is evidence of wastage: diverting the
river transforms pastures into unproductive marshes that
livestock are unable to graze. Moreover, the Afars face
competition from other pastoralists– Somalis in this case–
facing a similar economic crisis, and are engaged in a
veritable war for the control of pastures, water points, and
commercial and smuggling routes.
In such fragile conditions, it only takes small
disturbances, such as low rainfall or the reduction of
animal export opportunities (as is currently the case due to
the closure of the Eritrean border and the lack of demand
for Ethiopian beef following a recent outbreak of foot and
mouth disease) to trigger food shortages which can lead to
famine if nothing is done to prevent it.
Localized famines are not new to Ethiopia: they have
punctuated the country’s history since the Axumite empire of
antiquity. In the second half of the 20th century
alone, there have been two major crises: the 1973–74 famine,
which killed between 50,000 and 200,000 people and
precipitated the overthrow of Haile Selassie’s imperial
regime; and the 1984–85 famine, which caused a million
deaths. The latter was skilfully manipulated by the Mengistu
regime in support of a policy of forced population
displacement and asphyxiation of the Eritrean and Tigrayan
guerrilla movements.
The various actors on the Ethiopian political scene have
used famine alternately as a weapon and as a threat. Hunger
has often accompanied– when it has not precipitated–
radical transformation in Abyssinian society.
The failure of agricultural development
Various tensions within Ethiopian politics oblige the
government to handle the shortage carefully. Food issues are
high on the official agenda of the current regime, with no
less than 12 national programs wholly or partially devoted
to them.
The food security strategy and program (1996 and 1998)
aims at ‘the elimination of food security problems within
seven years (1998–2004)’. Despite the enthusiastic
declaration of the Ethiopian Deputy Prime Minister in 1998
that ‘hunger in Ethiopia has been eliminated’, results have
been mediocre.
Ethiopian farming suffers from serious structural problems.
The consequences of the famines of 1974–75 and 1984–85 have
repercussions to this day: studies have shown that the
inhabitants of regions hard hit by the 1984–85 crisis had
only achieved 60 percent restocking of their herds by the beginning
of the 1990s.
Furthermore, in the mid-1990s, two-thirds of Ethiopian
households had farms of less than one hectare whose average
productivity was among the lowest in Africa. This poor
performance is partly due to deforestation and soil erosion,
rudimentary farming techniques, and dependence on erratic
rainfall (barely 3 percent of farmland is irrigated). Moreover,
public ownership of land discourages farmers from investing
in improving their fields and prevents land consolidation.
The main initiative taken by the authorities to achieve food
security has been to extend the economic liberalization
introduced by Mengistu toward the end of his reign in 1988,
and to launch an extension program (PADETES) designed to
increase crop yields.
The package includes the sale of improved seeds, pesticides
and chemical fertilizers, education in new farming
techniques and ‘preferential’ access to credit.
Loan-repayment conditions, however, are draconian. Farmers
who cannot repay their debts due to a poor harvest have
their belongings confiscated or are sent to prison (this has
triggered several revolts in the southern regions). Under
such conditions, only the richer farmers in traditional
surplus-producing areas participate in the program.
Furthermore, the government refuses to consider changing the
public ownership of land, because it wants to prevent
farmers selling their plots and migrating en masse to urban
centers. Travel permits from the Mengistu regime have been
replaced by the threat of permanent expulsion if farmers
abandon ‘their’ land, even temporarily.
Finally, the regime has had no more success than its
predecessors in pastoral development. In a bid to encourage
the sedentarization of nomads, it is encouraging the
development of irrigated cash-cropping on the semi-arid
plains, further reducing grazing areas. Very little is being
done to stop the collapse of the pastoral economy. The few
projects devoted to this have been designed around a
technical approach to soil conservation, ignoring the
complexity of the relationship to the land in nomadic
cultures. All the projects have encountered steadfast
hostility from the populations concerned.
Although the food situation in Ethiopia has improved
substantially since the fall of Mengistu, this improvement
is fragile, and does not benefit all segments of the
population. Not surprisingly, it is the nomadic groups and
marginalized farmers who form the majority of the
‘beneficiaries’ registered as ‘natural-disaster victims’ on
the distribution lists of the Disaster Prevention and
Preparedness Commission (DPPC), the government ministry in
charge of relief.
The relief system
The DPPC plays a key role in assessing food crises and
implementing relief operations. With few exceptions, donors,
NGOs and UN agencies have to accept its estimates, follow
its beneficiary lists, and at no time intervene in
distributions except to ‘monitor’ operations. As Ethiopian
legislation states, ‘needless to say, NGOs should adhere to
the policy of the Government, and need not interfere with or
override the operations which it organizes’.
According to USAID and the public statements of NGOs working
in Ethiopia, the national distribution system is ‘effective
and transparent’. This was not, however, the conclusion of a
1998 survey of more than 4,000 households cited in T. S.
Jayne et al., Targeting of Food Aid in Ethiopia: Chronic
Need or Inertia? (East Lansing, MI: Michigan State
University, 2000) which sought to identify the profile of
groups that actually received food aid from the DPPC in
1995–96. The survey exposed the lack of correlation between
‘needs’ and ‘allocations’ and showed that households
suffering from a shortage of food received less food aid
than households with a surplus. Families with an intake of
more than 2,800 kcal per person per day received as much as
those whose intake was less than 1,000 kcal per person per
day, and those receiving the least assistance were found in
the critical bracket of 1,000 to 1,679 kcal per person per
day. Average aid per capita allocated in Tigray (where the
regime’s leaders originate) was eight times higher than the
national average. Finally, the researchers observed that
‘households are more likely to receive food aid in the
current year if they received food aid in past years’,
regardless of their actual vulnerability at the time of
distribution.
In regions where aid operations are well established after
several years of investment in monitoring and targeting
procedures – usually financed by NGOs – the bureaucratic
infrastructure has become blind to real developments in food
security. ‘Beneficiaries’ have developed skills enabling
them to take advantage of these institutional arrangements.
A small farmer in Wollo, for example, might plough his field
but not sow anything in order to claim that his harvest has
failed and convince the authorities of his eligibility for
food aid, which will bring him two or three quintals more
than a risky harvest.
Rather than a ‘dependency syndrome’, he and other
beneficiaries have developed genuine skills allowing them to
diversify their methods of obtaining food. Strategies such
as these flourish mainly in areas such as Wollo, where
farming no longer provides enough to meet the needs of the
most disadvantaged.
Targeting ‘errors’ also reflect political choices.
Disparities between regions are the direct result of the
central government’s control over the allocation of relief.
Priority is given to ‘politically useful’ areas and regions
that have powerful contacts in Addis Ababa able to tip the
balance in their favor. In other words, decisions about
food allocation reflect the balance of power between the
various components of the ruling coalition as much as the
actual or supposed status of food security across the
country.
At the lowest tier of the distribution system, local
government officials are responsible for identifying
beneficiaries. Their room for maneuver and administrative
functions encourage them to use relief to support patronage
or policing. Hence, during the famine in the Ogaden in 2000,
some communities spared by the food crisis received relief
while others, although disaster-stricken, were excluded
because they did not belong to the dominant clans in the
areas in which they sought help.
Clearly, the national production deficit recorded in 2003
will, together with the drought, make things worse for
hundreds of thousands of Ethiopians who already face chronic
food shortages. While it is not up to humanitarian agencies
to solve the food problems of Ethiopia, humanitarian NGOs do
have a responsibility not to hide the social and political
origins of the crisis afflicting marginalized populations,
and to ensure that relief actually gets to those who need
it. It is crucial that they preserve their operational
independence from the DPPC in order to reach those who might
otherwise be excluded from vital assistance.
Fabrice Weissman is Research Director at the Fondation
Médecins sans Frontières. This article first appeared in the
March 2003 issue of the Humanitarian Exchange, the
magazine of the Humanitarian Practice Network, whose website
is www.odihpn.org
References and further reading
Mathys, Ellen C. and E. Kebede. Monitoring
the Impact of Food Aid: The SC (UK) Programme in North and
South Wollo, Ethiopia in 2000 (Ethiopia: Save the Children
(UK), November, 2000).
Jean, Francois. Du Bon Usage de la Famine (Paris: Fondation
Liberté sans Frontières, 1987).
Dercon, Stefan. Growth and Poverty in Ethiopia in the 1990s:
An Economic Perspective (Oxford, Centre for the Study of
African Economies, Oxford University, 2000).
Hogg, Richard (ed.). Pastoralists, Ethnicity and the State in
Ethiopia (London: Haan Publishing, 1998).
Jayne, T.S. et al. Targeting of Food Aid in Ethiopia:
Chronic Need or Inertia?, MSU International Development
Paper 23 (East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University,
2000).
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