GOVERNMENT has said there is no reason for the price of mealie meal to remain high following the historic bumper harvest of more than 2.7 million tonnes of maize recorded this year.
Agriculture and Co-operatives Minister Peter Daka said it was Government’s expectation that the price of mealie meal would reduce drastically to make it more accessible to an ordinary person.
In an interview in Lusaka yesterday, Mr Daka said the Government was confident that the millers would play their part by ensuring that the price of mealie meal was reduced.
“As Government our position is that there is no reason why the price of mealie meal should remain high following the historic bumper harvest the country has recorded. It will only be fair that the prices are reduced for the benefit of Zambians,” he said.
He said the price of mealie meal should be reduced because there was sufficient maize in stock and that it would only be fair for the millers to reduce the price of the commodity instead of resisting in the name of making profits.
The minister said Government was engaging millers for discussions on how best the price of mealie meal could be reduced and was confident that the objective of cheaper mealie-meal would be realised.
Last week, Mr Daka announced that Zambia had recorded an unprecedented bumper harvest of more than 2.7 million tonnes of maize, representing a 48 per cent increase from last year.
The record yield has been attributed to the positive policies put in place by the Government in the agriculture sector, such as the Farmer Input Support Programme (FISP) and the enhanced extension services.
Zambia had a maize surplus of 1,085,709 tonnes and the increase in the number of people on the FISP programme from 200,000 to 500,000 also contributed to the bumper harvest.
Speaking when he gave a 2010 crop forecasting survey in Lusaka, Mr Daka said the only time Zambia had a crop output close to this year’s was during the 1988/89 farming season when a production of 1,943,219 tonnes was recorded.
This year, Zambia recorded 2,795,483 tonnes.
He reiterated that the aim of the Government when launching the FISP was to increase production.
And at the weekend, immediate past president of the Millers Association of Zambia Caleb Mulenga said the bumper harvest recorded in the 2009/10 season would translate into reduced mealie meal prices.
[Times of Zambia]