- Agriculture in Guinea
In
Guinea in western Africa, only 2.6% of the country's arable land area is cultivated, yet agriculture accounts for 24% of the totalGDP and employs 84% of the economically active population. cite web|url=http://www.nationsencyclopedia.com/Africa/Guinea-AGRICULTURE.html|title=Guinea Agriculture|publisher=Nations Encyclopedia|accessdate=August 30|accessyear=2008]In 1999, the main subsistence crops were
manioc , 812,000 tons;rice , 750,000 tons;sweet potato es, 135,000 tons;yam s, 89,000 tons; andcorn , 89,000 tons. The economy of Guinea also depends on cash crops such assugarcane ,citrus fruit s,bananas ,pineapple s,peanut s,palm kernel s,coffee , andcoconuts . In 1999, an estimated 429,000 tons of plantains, 220,000 tons of sugarcane, 215,000 tons of citrus fruits, 150,000 tons of bananas, 174,000 tons of peanuts, 52,000 tons of palm kernels, and 18,000 tons of coconuts were produced.Coffee production in Guinea has fluctuated over time due to illegal coffee smuggling that affected the industry before the country's reforms in the early 1980s. In 1999 production of coffee beans was estimated at 21,000 tons, compared to 14,000 tons on average annually from 1979 to 1981.Attempts at price fixation affected agriculture in Guinea in the 1970s and 1980s since the independence. The French has reduced their influence in plantations and the removal of the French tariff had affected production in the 1970s at a time when drought was prevalent. During the 1970s and early 1980s, food production declined and agricultural exports fell markedly. In 1984, a year when drought seriously affected Guinea, 186,000 tons of cereal had to be imported to prevent starvation. However, since
1985 , free market policies have advocated the decentralisation of state owned plantations and government owned agricultural produce towards localized private smallholders. There are as many as 500,000 operating in Guinea by the late 1990s which reportedly yielded twice as much as the agricultural output than state owned agriculture did in 1970s, even without finanical assistance.References
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