Cotton in Malawi is an important part of the agricultural history of Malawi. Cotton is not indigenous to the country, but was introduced into warmer lowland areas no later than the 17th century. Production in the late pre-colonial and early colonial period was limited but, from the early 20th century, it has been grown mainly by African smallholders in the south of the country. For a brief period during the First World War, cotton was the most valuable export crop, and it has remained an important earner of foreign exchange.
Throughout most of the colonial period and since independence, smallholder cotton growers have been subject to market regulation which prevented competition with estates owned by Europeans in the earlier period and by members of the Malawian political elite later. Regulations transferred resources away from smallholder cotton farmers and, where the rewards were meager, probably discouraged them from abandoning subsistence food cultivation, as there is the potential to grow much more cotton than is currently being produced. [1]
In pre-colonial Malawi, cotton was grown in the Shire valley in the south from the 17th century, including a local variety called “Tonje Kadja” in the local Mang’anja language and an imported variety, “Tonje Manga”, which produced more cotton of better quality. Smaller quantities were grown in the Mchinji and Kasungu districts of Central Malawi and at the northern end of Lake Malawi. However, in most of the country, the climate was unsuitable for cotton growing, although cotton cloth was imported as a luxury item. [2] Cotton growing in the Shire valley was disrupted by famine and local warfare in the 1860s but partly resumed, at least in the Lower Shire, in the next decade, although by the 1890s, the importation of cotton cloth produced in Europe had stifled local production. [3]
After a rapid rise from virtually nothing before 1908, cotton production for the whole protectorate was around 1,000 short tons [4] a season in the years 1911/12 to 1917/18, but declined steeply until 1924. From 1925 to 1930, it rose from 2,909 short tons, although there was another slump in the early 1930s. Before the 1950s, almost all the saleable cotton crop was exported, and cotton accounted for 12% of the value of Nyasaland's exports in 1908 rising to 44% in 1917. However, in 1922 it had declined to 16%, in third place behind tobacco and tea exports. [5] From 1925 to 1936, on average 80% of production was from the Lower Shire districts of Nsanje and Chikwawa, but production there later declined as parts of the area became permanently inundated. [6]
The history of colonial cotton production is divisible between its relatively unsuccessful introduction onto European-owned estates and more successful cultivation by Africans on their own land. In both cases, the initiative came from the British Cotton Growing Association (BCGA), a Lancashire-based manufacturers’ organisation that stimulated cotton production in the British Empire, initially by making cash advances to European settlers, but later by providing suitable cotton seed to be distributed to African farmers. [7]
At first, European plantation agriculture was focused on the Shire Highlands and agriculture there first concentrated on coffee. An attempt in 1903 to grow Egyptian cotton there was unsuccessful, as it was more suitable for hotter areas, but from 1906, William Jervis Livingstone developed a hardier variety of Upland cotton, which he called Nyasaland Upland. Estate production rose significantly between 1908 and 1914. However, in the latter year, the BCGA ended its policy of making loans or advances, and many of the estates turned from growing cotton to tobacco. [8] [9] By 1930, almost no cotton in Nyasaland was grown on European estates. [10]
Estate-grown cotton required intensive labour over its five or six month growing season and, to ensure that sufficient workers were available throughout this period, many estates, notably A L Bruce Estates and the African Lakes Corporation, exploited Mozambican immigrants who had no right to farm land collectively held by the local African people. These migrant workers were given labour tenancies under a system called thangata, which obliged them to work for several months without wages on estate land in lieu of rent for a plot the tenant could use for their own crops. As labour was required mainly in the rainy season, this left tenants little time to grow their food crops. [11] [12]
From 1903, the BCGA provided limited amounts of Egyptian cotton seed to African farmers in the Upper Shire valley, but in 1905 the Association sent an expert to Nyasaland, who advocated wider seed distribution, building ginneries and providing markets in lowland areas suitable for growing Egyptian cotton by African farmers, although until 1914they were discouraged from growing cotton in upland areas where it might compete with the estates. [13] [14] In 1910, the BCGA built a ginnery and agreed to purchase part of the cotton crop. [15] Production by Africans flourished along the Shire valley, where river and later rail transport was available, but it was often abandoned in areas were transport costs were high. [16]
Disastrous floods in the Lower Shire in 1918 severely hit production there, and a post-war slump in cotton prices convinced many African farmers outside the Lower Shire valley to cease growing cotton. However, after 1924, production by African growers in the Lower Shire revived. [17] [18]
The expansion of cash crop production among the African smallholders in Nyasaland was followed by market regulation, as the Nyasaland government was concerned too few Africans would be available to work on European estates. [19] Production in marginal areas was also discouraged by the colonial administration's 1910 Cotton Ordinance, which limited those who could issue seed to or purchase cotton from these farmers. After a boom in sales during the First World War ended, the BGCA ceased operations in several areas, generally those where transport was difficult. [20] However, its position as preferred buyer was strengthened in 1923 and would have created a virtual monopoly for the Association, had it been possible to control the activities of middlemen. [21] The BGCA remained the main buyer until 1931, when it ended its purchasing because of the losses it incurred. [22] Middlemen were only brought under control after the Great Depression when prices began to stabilise and the 1934 Cotton Ordinance introduced and enforced tougher restrictions on them [23]
By 1936, the Colonial Office considered that, except for tea, European agriculture in Nyasaland had failed in economic terms and that indigenous farmers would be the producers of the future. [24] This was particularly true of cotton, as most was grown on land belonging to African communities rather than by estate owners or their tenants. [25]
Cotton production recovered from a recession in the early 1930s, and reached a peak of 9,737 short tons in 1935, remaining high until 1938, but collapsing in 1939 with the outbreak of the Second World War. [26] Proportionally less cotton was produced in the Lower Shire, as much of the rich alluvial lands were inundated by rising river levels and land further from the river lost fertility through repeated crops being taken with little or no fertilizer applied. However, in 1935, the Zambezi Bridge was constructed, creating an uninterrupted rail link from Blantyre to the sea at Beira, and in the same year a northern railway extension to Lake Nyasa was completed, where a terminal for lake steamer services was developed. [27] This reduced transport costs for cotton growers around the lake and promoted its cultivation there. However, cotton's relative importance as an export declined to 10% in 1941 and 7% in 1951. [28] Between 1951 and 1960, the value of cotton exports averaged only 5% of the protectorate's total exports, and from 1954 it ranked in fourth place behind groundnuts. Exports had fallen from an average of 3,000 short tons to only 1,300 short tons in 1960, although more cotton was being used domestically. [29]
Between 1931 and 1939, there was no monopolistic cotton buyer. However, the outbreak of the Second World War disrupted normal trading channels, and the colonial government adopted powers to purchase goods considered essential for the war effort at controlled prices. [30] [31] Although cotton production had been started to supply Lancashire's mills, from 1935 there was a drop in the proportion of cotton sent to Britain, which accelerated after 1939. During the war, most cotton was exported to South Africa, Australia and India, but by 1951, 80% was being sent to Britain. [32]
Government controls were continued after the war, and a Cotton Board was formed in 1951, which was amalgamated in 1955 with two other produce boards to form the Agricultural Production and Marketing Board. [33] With the withdrawal of the estates from cotton growing, their demands for labour and objections to smallholder competition became less important to the colonial government than its using the marketing boards as a source of revenue by paying low prices to African producers. [34] However, government policies in the 1950s favoured the development of smallholder agriculture in general and, from the middle of that decade until the early 1970s, both under colonial rule and after independence, African smallholders enjoyed more freedom from onerous controls than before or since. [35]
Total cotton production in 1963 was 4,800 short tons, and it remained at that level for the rest of the decade, then rose steadily to around 7,200 short tons in the 1970s and 10,600 tons in 1984. [36] After that date, annual production fluctuated for almost a decade but then rose to a peak of 23,760 short tons in 1995, before falling back to around 11,000 short tons up to 2002. From 2003, the trend was generally upward until 2014, with peaks of 23,760 short tons in 1995 31,200, short tons in 2007 and 43,200 short tons in 2013, [37] although it later declined to 30,000 metric tonnes (33,070 short tons) in 2017. [38] Cotton has ranked as Malawi's fourth export by value after tobacco, tea and sugar since independence, and it is still generally grown by smallholder farmers, whose number as registered growers was almost 97,000 in 1993 and almost 217,000 in 2005. Although the trend in producer numbers and, to a lesser extent, areas planted were upward, there were significant annual variations, and it is estimated production could be doubled if cotton were grown in all suitable areas. The overall increase in cotton production was largely related to an increase in yields as more fertilizer was used. [39]
In Malawi in 1989, the average cotton-grower's smallholding was 1.28 hectares, of which about half was used to grow cotton and the rest for food crops. [40] In terms of purchasing power, producer prices rose gradually from 1963 to 1980, then stagnated until dropping back to their 1975 level in 1985, although this was partly offset by higher yields. [41] Since a low point in 1993, producer prices grew steadily until 2009, then began to fluctuate greatly from year to year, being almost twice as high in 2012 as in 2013, when production was much higher. [42]
Between independence in 1963 and 1972, the Malawi government actively supported the smallholder farming sector, as few European-owned estates remained. However, its disappointment with smallholder production brought about a change in government policy, which involved transferring land used by smallholders to the estate sector. [43] Most of these new estates were medium-sized farms, not on the scale of former European-owned estates, leased on 99-year agricultural leases to senior officials and politicians of the ruling Malawi Congress Party: most attempts in the 1970s and 1980s to grow cotton on larger commercial farms failed, just as similar attempts on European estates had failed earlier. [44]
The colonial-era Agricultural Production and Marketing Board was replaced by a Farmers Marketing Board (FMB) in 1962, which included growers’ representatives as members. The FMB was given wide powers to buy, sell and process farm products, to promote price stability and to distribute subsidised seed and fertilizer sales: until 1969 it operated on a not-for-profit basis. [45] After that date the FMB and from 1972 its successor, the Agricultural Development and Marketing Corporation (ADMARC) operated a policy of underpaying smallholders and transferring resources away from them to the state and to the elite owning the newly-created estates. [46]
After food shortages in 1992 and the end of one-party rule in 1994, ADMARC was reformed and acted as the main provider for smallholders of fertilizer and seed at subsidised prices, and of local markets to sell their crops in at standard prices, as few private traders emerged. [47] After further efforts to promote private trading, three large private companies and a few smaller ones entered the cotton-buying market, but these colluded to keep prices low. Most cotton was still exported, as the domestic clothing industry was very small. [48] Liberalisation of Malawi's agricultural sector and the attempt to reduce ADMARC's influence after 2006 largely failed and by 2010, most cotton markets were again operated by ADMARC. This organisation is under the control of politicians, and this has led to perception that it does not act in the best interests of smallholders [49]
Nyasaland was a British protectorate located in Africa that was established in 1907 when the former British Central Africa Protectorate changed its name. Between 1953 and 1963, Nyasaland was part of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. After the Federation was dissolved, Nyasaland became independent from Britain on 6 July 1964 and was renamed Malawi.
The British Central Africa Protectorate (BCA) was a British protectorate proclaimed in 1889 and ratified in 1891 that occupied the same area as present-day Malawi: it was renamed Nyasaland in 1907. British interest in the area arose from visits made by David Livingstone from 1858 onward during his exploration of the Zambezi area. This encouraged missionary activity that started in the 1860s, undertaken by the Universities' Mission to Central Africa, the Church of Scotland and the Free Church of Scotland, and which was followed by a small number of settlers. The Portuguese government attempted to claim much of the area in which the missionaries and settlers operated, but this was disputed by the British government. To forestall a Portuguese expedition claiming effective occupation, a protectorate was proclaimed, first over the south of this area, then over the whole of it in 1889. After negotiations with the Portuguese and German governments on its boundaries, the protectorate was formally ratified by the British government in May 1891.
The Chilembwe uprising was a rebellion against British colonial rule in Nyasaland which took place in January 1915. It was led by John Chilembwe, an American-educated Baptist minister. Based around his Church in the village of Mbombwe in the south-east of the protectorate, the leaders of the revolt were mainly from an emerging black middle class. They were motivated by grievances against the colonial system including forced labour, racial discrimination, and new demands imposed on the indigenous population following the outbreak of World War I.
Thangata is a word deriving from the Chewa language of Malawi which has changed its meaning several times, although all meanings relate to agriculture. Its original, pre-colonial usage related to reciprocal help given in neighbours' fields or freely-given agricultural labour as thanks for a benefit. In colonial times, between 1891 and 1962, it generally meant agricultural labour given in lieu of a cash rent, and generally without any payment, by a tenant on an estate owned by a European. Thangata was often exploited, and tenants could be forced to work on the owners' crops for four to six months annually when they could have cultivated their own crops. From the 1920s, the name thangata was extended to situations where tenants were given seeds to grow set quotas of designated crops instead of providing cash or labour. Both forms of thangata were abolished in 1962, but both before and after independence and up to the present, the term has been used for short-term rural casual work, often on tobacco estates, which is considered by workers to be exploitative.
The main economic products of Malawi are tobacco, tea, cotton, groundnuts, sugar and coffee. These have been among the main cash crops for the last century, but tobacco has become increasingly predominant in the last quarter-century, with a production in 2011 of 175,000 tonnes. Over the last century, tea and groundnuts have increased in relative importance while cotton has decreased. The main food crops are maize, cassava, sweet potatoes, sorghum, bananas, rice, and Irish potatoes and cattle, sheep and goats are raised. The main industries deal with agricultural processing of tobacco, tea and sugar and timber products. The industrial production growth rate is estimated at 10% (2009).
Tobacco production in Malawi is one of the nation's largest sources of income. As of 2005, Malawi was the twelfth-largest producer of tobacco leaves and the 7th largest global supporter of tobacco leaves. As of 2010, Malawi was the world's leading producer of burley leaf tobacco. With the decline of tobacco farms in the West, interest in Malawi's low-grade, high-nicotine tobacco has increased. Today, Malawian tobacco is found in blends of nearly every cigarette smoked in industrialized nations including the popular and ubiquitous Camel and Marlboro brands. It is the world's most tobacco dependent economy. In 2013 Malawi produced about 133,000 tonnes of tobacco leaf, a reduction from a maximum of 208,000 tonnes in 2009 and although annual production was maintained at similar levels in 2014 and 2015, prices fell steadily from 2013 to 2017, in part because of weakening world demand but also because of declining quality.
A. L. Bruce Estates was one of three largest owners of agricultural estates in colonial Nyasaland. Alexander Low Bruce, the son-in-law of David Livingstone, acquired a large estate at Magomero in the Shire Highlands of Nyasaland in 1893, together with two smaller ones. On his death, these estates were to operate as a trust to bring Christianity and Commerce to Central Africa. However his two sons later formed a commercial company which bought the estates from the trust. The company gained a reputation for the harsh exploitation and ill-treatment of its tenants under a labour system known by the African term "thangata", which operated in the plantation cultivation of cotton and tobacco. This exploitation was one of the causes of the 1915 uprising led by John Chilembwe, which resulted in the deaths of three of the company's European employees. After the failure of its own cotton and tobacco plantations, the company forced its tenants to grow tobacco rather than food on their own land and significantly underpaid them. Following almost three decades of losses, the Magomero estate was in poor condition, but the company was able to sell it at a profit between 1949 and 1952 because the government needed land for resettlement of African former tenants evicted from private estates. The company was liquidated in 1959.
The Natives on Private Estates Ordinance, 1928 was a colonial ordinance passed by the Legislative Council of the Nyasaland Protectorate. The body was composed mainly of senior colonial officials, with a minority of nominated members, to represent European residents. The ordinance regulated the conditions under which land could be farmed by African tenants on estates owned by European settlers within that protectorate. The legislation corrected some of the worst abuses of the system of thangata under which tenants were required to work for the estate owner in lieu of paying rent.
Eugene Charles Albert Sharrer was a British subject by naturalisation but of German descent, who was a leading entrepreneur in what is now Malawi for around fifteen years between his arrival in 1888 and his departure. He rapidly built-up commercial operations including wholesale and retail trading, considerable holdings of land, cotton and coffee plantations and a fleet of steamers on the Zambezi and Shire rivers. Sharrer was prominent in pressure groups that represented the interests of European planters and their businesses to the colonial authorities, and was responsible for the development of the first railway in what had become the British Central Africa Protectorate, whose construction was agreed in 1902. In 1902, Sharrer consolidate all his business interests into the British Central Africa Company Ltd and became its principal shareholder Shortly after this he left British Central Africa permanently for London, although he retained his financial interests in the territory. Very little is known of his history before he arrived in Central Africa but he died in London during the First World War.
Blantyre and East Africa Ltd is a company that was incorporated in Scotland in 1898 and is still in existence. Its main activity was the ownership of estates in the south of what is now Malawi. The main estate crops it grew were tobacco until the 1950s and tea, which it continued to grow until the company’s tea estates were sold. Blantyre and East Africa Ltd was one of four large estate-owning companies in colonial Nyasaland which together owned over 3.4 million acres of land, including the majority of the fertile land in the Shire Highlands. The company acquired most of its landholdings between 1898 and 1901 from several early European settlers, whose title to this land had been recognised by Certificates of Claim issued by the administration of the British Central Africa Protectorate. After the boom for Europeans growing tobacco ended in about 1927, the company retained one large estate in Zomba District where its tenants were encouraged to grow tobacco and others where it grew tea. It was also left with a scattering of small estates that it neither operated nor effectively managed but obtained cash rents from African tenants on crowded and unsupervised estates. Many of its estates, excluding the tea estates which it continued to manage directly, were sold to the colonial administration of Nyasaland between 1950 and 1955.
The British Central Africa Company Ltd was one of the four largest European-owned companies that operated in colonial Nyasaland, now Malawi. The company was incorporated in 1902 to acquire the business interests that Eugene Sharrer, an early settler and entrepreneur, had developed in the British Central Africa Protectorate. Sharrer became the majority shareholder of the company on its foundation. The company initially had trading and transport interests, but these were sold by the 1930s. For most of the colonial period, its extensive estates produced cotton, tobacco or tea but the British Central Africa Company Ltd developed the reputation of being a harsh and exploitative landlord whose relations with its tenants were poor. In 1962, shortly before independence, the company sold most of its undeveloped land to the Nyasaland government, but it retained some plantations and two tea factories. It changed its name to The Central Africa Company Ltd and was acquired by the Lonrho group, both in 1964.
John Buchanan (1855–1896), was a Scottish horticulturist who went to Central Africa, now Malawi, in 1876 as a lay member of the missionary party that established Blantyre Mission. Buchanan came to Central Africa as an ambitious artisan: his character was described as dour and devout but also as restlessly ambitious, and he saw in Central Africa a gateway to personal achievement. He started a mission farm on the site of Zomba, Malawi but was dismissed from the mission in 1881 for brutality. From being a disgraced missionary, Buchanan first became a very influential planter owning, with his brothers, extensive estates in Zomba District. He then achieved the highest position he could in the British administration as Acting British Consul to Central Africa from 1887 to 1891. In that capacity declared a protectorate over the Shire Highlands in 1889 to pre-empt a Portuguese expedition that intended to claim sovereignty over that region. In 1891, the Shire Highlands became part of the British Central Africa Protectorate. John Buchanan died at Chinde in Mozambique in March 1896 on his way to visit Scotland, and his estates were later acquired by the Blantyre and East Africa Ltd.
The Agricultural Development and Marketing Corporation, usually known as ADMARC, was formed in Malawi in 1971 as a government-owned corporation or parastatal to promote the Malawian economy by increasing the volume and quality of its agricultural exports, to develop new foreign markets for the consumption of Malawian agricultural produce and to support Malawi's farmers. it was the successor of a number of separate marketing boards of the colonial-era and early post-colonial times, whose functions were as much about controlling African smallholders or generating government revenues as in promoting agricultural development. At its foundation, ADMARC was given the power to finance the economic development of any public or private organisation, agricultural or not.
The Native Tobacco Board, or NTB, was formed in Nyasaland in 1926 as a Government-sponsored body with the primary aim of controlling the production of tobacco by African smallholders and generating revenues for the government, and the secondary aim of increasing the volume and quality of tobacco exports. At the time of its formation, much of Nyasaland's tobacco was produced on European-owned estates, whose owners demanded protection against African tobacco production that might compete with their own, and against the possibility that profitable smallholder farming would draw cheap African labour away from their estates. From around 1940, the aim of the NTB was less about restricting African tobacco production and more about generating governmental revenues, supposedly for development but still involving the diversion of resources away from smallholder farming. In 1956, the activities, powers and duties of what had by then been renamed the African Tobacco Board were transferred to the Agricultural Production and Marketing Board, which had powers to buy smallholder surpluses of tobacco, maize, cotton and other crops, but whose producer prices continued to be biased against peasant producers.
Native Trust Land in colonial Nyasaland was a category of land held in trust by the Secretary of State for the Colonies and administered by the colonial governor for the benefit of African communities. In pre-colonial times, land belonged to the African communities that occupied it, and their members were free to use it in accordance with local customary law. In the late 19th century, large areas of fertile land were acquired by European settlers, and the remainder became Crown land, which the colonial government could alienate without the consent of the resident communities. To give a measure of protection to those communities, in 1916 land in Native Reserves, which then amounted to about a quarter of the land in the protectorate, was designated as Native Trust Land, to be held in trust for the benefit of African communities. Later, in 1936, all Crown Land except game or forest reserves or that used for public purposes became Native Trust Land, and Native Authorities were authorised to allocate Trust Land to their communities in accordance with customary law. After 1936, Native Trust Land constituted over 80% of the land in Nyasaland and most African farmers farmed Native Trust Land from then until Nyasaland gained independence as Malawi in 1964 and after.
The British Cotton Growing Association (BCGA) was an organisation formed in 1902 from the various bodies connected with the Lancashire cotton industry which aimed to reduce that industry's dependence on supplies of raw cotton from the United States by promoting the development of cotton growing in the British Empire. It was described as a "semi-philanthropic" organisation, or combination of non-governmental organization, and a development agency, as it provided development funds without requiring any direct repayment, but did expect the Lancashire cotton industry to benefit indirectly in the longer term from the availability more secure cotton supplies.
The Livingstone Bruce Plantation Raid was an attack on the European owned and run cotton and tobacco plantation, which was situated at Magomero. The attack on the plantation was only major action of the ill fated Chilembwe uprising.
The Nyasaland famine of 1949 was a famine that occurred in the Shire Highlands in the Southern Province of Nyasaland and also in a part of the Central Province in 1949: its effects extended into the early part of 1950. The immediate cause was severe droughts in December 1948 to January 1949 and in March 1949 that destroyed much of the maize crop on which the people of the affected areas relied during its main growing season. This followed two years of erratic rainfall and poor harvests which had depleted the reserves in farmers’ granaries. The effect of crop failure was intensified by the failure of the colonial government to maintain a suitably large emergency grain reserve, delays in importing sufficient relief supplies and its requirement that most of the relief provided was paid for by its recipients. The official death toll from starvation was some 200 people, which may be an underestimate, and it excludes those dying of diseases exacerbated by malnutrition.
Leroy Vail whose birth name was Hazen Leroy Vail, was an American specialist in African studies and educator who specialized in the history and linguistics of Central Africa and later extended his interests to Southern Africa. He taught in universities in Malawi, Zambia and the United States and his research in the first two countries inclined him toward the view that Central Africa underwent a period of underdevelopment that began in the mid-19th century and accelerated under colonial rule. After his return to the United States, he cooperated with Landeg White on studies of colonial Mozambique and on the value of African poetry and songs as a source of oral history.
Richard Wildman Kettlewell (1910–1994) was a colonial agricultural officer who spent all his colonial career in Nyasaland apart from three years of wartime army service. He became Director of Agriculture in 1951 and Secretary for National Resources then Minister of Lands and Surveys between 1960 and 1962. He was influential in the late colonial administration of Nyasaland, and responsible for the introduction of several controversial agricultural and land-use policies that were highly unpopular with African farmers and which he accepted had promoted nationalist sentiments in the protectorate. After leaving Nyasaland in 1962 shortly before its independence, he settled in the Cotswolds for the remainder of his life and undertook part-time consulting work on tropical land use.