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‘Paying for the Emergency by displacing the settlers’: global coffee and rural restructuring in late colonial Kenya*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2009

David Hyde
Affiliation:
School of Social Sciences, University of East London, 4–6 University Way, London E16 2RD, UK E-mail: d.hyde@uel.ac.uk

Abstract

Global coffee markets entered into a deep cyclical downturn from the mid 1950s. As producers, notably Brazil and Colombia, continued to increase their output, intense struggles arose among global competitors for larger slices of a contracting market. The prospect of an economic catastrophe, following the release of Brazil's surplus stocks, preoccupied Kenya's colonial government, which was dependent on tax revenues derived from coffee sales, and was less able to support the settler-dominated industry in the face of the increased costs incurred by the Mau Mau Emergency after 1952. This left European settlers exposed, with many barely able to recover their costs of production. What began as a counter-insurgency strategy, by allowing an elite of African farmers to grow Arabica coffee (a privilege formerly reserved to settlers) was enlarged and accelerated in response to unrelenting global market pressures. These compelled the colonial government to beckon low-cost African farmers into coffee production, in a bid to save its tax base and ensure the survival of the coffee sector. Even though the Coffee Marketing Board confiscated much of their income, African farmers proved well able to rally family labour and achieve surpluses. Rationalization of production and the re-organization of the commodity chain to maintain high quality at lower cost were decisive in both reconfiguring the economic and social relationships that underpinned Kenya's independence in 1963 and securing the country's place on the world market. The aim here is to explain the crisis, and its grip on Kenya's economy during the transition to independence and beyond.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009

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References

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25 ‘Coffee profit tax system ends’, EAS, 28 March 1958.

26 Ibid.

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29 ‘Coffee Board committee to study new tax’.

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33 ‘Sharp drop in the quality of Kenya coffee’, EAS, 29 November 1957.

34 All references to coffee weights throughout the text are in long tons. 1 bag of coffee weighed, on average, 0.058 tons.

35 Daviron and Ponte, The coffee paradox, p. 86.

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39 KNA, ‘East Africa: a market for U.S. products in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda’, a supplement issued by the US Department of Commerce/Bureau of International Commerce.

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43 International Coffee Study Group, International Organization, 14, 2, 1960, pp. 367–8, and 14, 4, 1960, p. 695.

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45 ‘Kenya farms faced with worst crisis since 1930s: cuts in costs essential’, EAS, 28 May 1958.

46 Ibid.

47 Hyde, ‘Plantation struggles’, p. 77.

48 Ibid., Appendix 33: ‘Anatomy of the coffee industry in Thika district giving details of ownership and acreages of estates, tribal and gender composition of the workforce as at August 1st, 1960’, pp. 287–8.

49 ‘Cheaper prices good for coffee in the long run: report on world trade talks’, EAS, 21 November 1958.

50 ‘Concern at slide of coffee prices: effect on Kenya economy’, EAS, 2 December 1958.

51 Ibid.

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59 ‘Coffee group to stabilise prices all over Africa’, EAS, 10 December 1960.

60 Ibid.

61 Ibid.

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63 Ibid.

64 ‘Coffee auction’, EAS, 10 May 1961.

65 KNA, Kenya Trade and Supplies Bulletin, June 1961.

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68 ‘Peril in falling coffee prices: treaty's aim being ignored - chairman’, EAS, 21 September 1961.

69 Cited in ‘More coffee price falls likely: talks in U.S. vital to East Africa’, EAS, 14 March 1962.

70 Ibid.

71 ‘London coffee talks clarified issues: policy study made’, EAS, 21 June 1961.

72 ‘Drop in prices would ruin Kenya warns chairman of coffee board’, EAS, 13 April 1962.

73 KNA, AMC 7/20: Verjee Report, November 1962.

74 Hyde, ‘Plantation struggles’.

75 ‘Kenya coffee still the world's best’, EAS, 1 December 1962.

76 ‘5,000 ton target for non-quota markets: Kenya plans to raise exports of coffee’, EAS, 22 November 1962.

77 KNA, AMC 7/20: Verjee Report, November 1962.

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79 Verjee Report.

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84 Panitch and Gindin, ‘Global capitalism’, pp. 13–18.

85 Bilder, ‘The International Coffee Agreement: a case history’, p. 329.

86 Ibid.

87 International Coffee Agreement, 1962; ch. 1, article 1, p. 7.

88 Daviron and Ponte, The coffee paradox, p. 87; see also A. Kumar, Primary commodities: international control of production and trade, Ljubljana: Research Centre for Cooperation with Developing Countries, [1986], p. 165; Bilder, ‘The International Coffee Agreement: a case history’, p. 329.

89 Ibid., p. 340.

90 Daviron and Ponte, The coffee paradox, p. 87.

91 Bilder, ‘The International Coffee Agreement: a case history’, pp. 344–7.

92 Government of Kenya, Development plan, 1966–70, Nairobi: Government Printer, 1966, p. 176.

93 Kumar, Primary commodities, p. 165.

94 Swynnerton, A plan.

95 Heyer et al., Rural development, p. 104; David Wall, ‘Export prospects for Africa south of the Sahara’, African Affairs, 68, 270, 1969, pp. 26–41; Ann Seidman, ‘Prospects for Africa's exports’, Journal of Modern African Studies, 9, 3, 1971, pp. 409–28.

96 ‘Coffee growers form committee to fight cess’, EAS, 12 November 1965.

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98 Ibid.

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100 Alan Rufus Waters, ‘Change and evolution in the structure of the Kenya coffee industry’, African Affairs, 71, 283, 1972, pp. 163–75.

101 Government of Kenya, Development plan, 1966–70, p. 1.

102 TNA, CO/544, Department of Agriculture Annual Reports, 1962–8; Hyde, ‘Plantation Struggles in Kenya’, Appendix-36, p. 304.

103 TNA, CO/544, Department of Agriculture Annual Reports, 1966–8.

104 KNA, Department of Agriculture press statement, 4 June 1967; CBK, Kenya Coffee, CBK Monthly Bulletins, November 1966–June 1967. See also Lamb, Peasant politics.

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107 For the average rate of profit, see Karl Marx, Capital, vol. 3, Moscow: Progess Publishers, 1971, part 2, ‘Conversion of profit into average profit’, pp. 142–210.

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109 Bilder, ‘The International Coffee Agreement: a case history’, pp. 328–91.