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Ethiopia Government Rural Programs
https://photius.com/countries/ethiopia/economy/ethiopia_economy_government_rural_pro~194.html
Sources: The Library of Congress Country Studies; CIA World Factbook
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    In l984 the founding congress of the Workers' Party of Ethiopia (WPE) emphasized the need for a coordinated strategy based on socialist principles to accelerate agricultural development. To implement this strategy, the government relied on peasant associations and rural development, cooperatives and state farms, resettlement and villagization, increased food production, and a new marketing policy.

    Peasant Associations and Rural Devlopment

    [JPEG]

    Planting cotton in the Awash Valley.
    Courtesy United Nations.

    [JPEG]

    Food distribution point at Senafe, 1988.
    Courtesy International Committee of the Red Cross (T. Gassman)

    Articles 8 and l0 of the l975 Land Reform Proclamation required that peasants be organized into a hierarchy of associations that would facilitate the implementation of rural development programs and policies. Accordingly, after the land reform announcement, the government mobilized more than 60,000 students to organize peasants into associations. By the end of l987, there were 20,367 peasant associations with a membership of 5.7 million farmers. Each association covered an area of 800 hectares, and members included tenants, landless laborers, and landowners holding fewer than ten hectares. Former landowners who had held more than ten hectares of land could join an association only after the completion of land redistribution. An umbrella organization known as the All-Ethiopia Peasants' Association (AEPA) represented local associations. Peasant associations assumed a wide range of responsibilities, including implementation of government land use directives; adjudication of land disputes; encouragement of development programs, such as water and land conservation; construction of schools, clinics, and cooperatives; organization of defense squads; and tax collection. Peasant associations also became involved in organizing forestry programs, local service and production cooperatives, road construction, and data collection projects, such as the l984 census.

    Data as of 1991


    NOTE: The information regarding Ethiopia on this page is re-published from The Library of Congress Country Studies and the CIA World Factbook. No claims are made regarding the accuracy of Ethiopia Government Rural Programs information contained here. All suggestions for corrections of any errors about Ethiopia Government Rural Programs should be addressed to the Library of Congress and the CIA.

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Revised 10-Nov-04
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