BRIEFING: RUMOURS AND REALITIES OF CHINESE AGRICULTURAL ENGAGEMENT IN MOZAMBIQUE

Foreign interest in large land acquisitions in Africa began to hit the headlines in 2007 and 2008. China, a net food importer since 2004, was seen as one of the chief players in this rush for land. Mozambique has often been cited in support of the widespread conclusion that the Chinese government is...

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Veröffentlicht in:African affairs (London) 2012-07, Vol.111 (444), p.483-492
Hauptverfasser: Brautigam, Deborah, Ekman, Sigrid-Marianella Stensrud
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Foreign interest in large land acquisitions in Africa began to hit the headlines in 2007 and 2008. China, a net food importer since 2004, was seen as one of the chief players in this rush for land. Mozambique has often been cited in support of the widespread conclusion that the Chinese government is directly seeking land in Africa for China's own food security.1 This briefing shows that the much-circulated picture of Chinese agricultural activities in Mozambique is closer to fiction than fact. That the conventional wisdom on Mozambique can be so far from reality calls into question the picture in other African countries as well. Worries about the developmental impact of large-scale land investment are well-founded. Large land transfers are bound to raise alarms, and more so if the land is communally owned or occupied by subsistence farmers, or in a food-deficit region. Furthermore, many believe that Chinese companies will not simply invest in a search for profit, but will act primarily to advance Beijing's national security goals.2 Chinese foreign investment in land evokes fears of loss of national control, hence the parallels that are frequently drawn with neo-colonialism. Beginning in 2008, multiple reports emerged stating that Beijing and Maputo had (1) signed agreements in 2006 or 2007 to import tens of thousands of Chinese farmers into Mozambique to produce rice for China; (2) that local outrage had scuttled these plans; but (3) that the Chinese government had still pledged to invest US$800 million to modernize Mozambique's rice sector to supply the Chinese market.3 This three-part story was circulated globally, cited often, and, as noted below, became fundamental to analyses of Chinese engagement in agriculture in Africa more generally. Intrigued by these reports and their implications, we travelled to Mozambique, separately, in 2009, 2010, and ... Adapted from the source document.
ISSN:0001-9909
1468-2621
DOI:10.1093/afraf/ads030