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The Steve Pocock Podcast

The Steve Pocock Podcast

Author: Steve Pocock

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The Steve Pocock Podcast is a series-based show where I dig into the topics I’m passionate about - sharing stories, lessons, and practical insights from the ground.

Series one is a six-part season on the future of farming in Zimbabwe. Next up: doing business in Timor-Leste - coming soon.
6 Episodes
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In Episode 6, the final episode of this series, I bring everything together and keep it practical by focusing on the role we all play in realising the potential of agriculture in Zimbabwe.I talk through what government needs to prioritise, what investors and the private sector need in order to back the sector, what large commercial operators can do to drive growth and build value chains, and what support smallholders need to become more productive and resilient. The goal is simple: move from good ideas and big talk to coordinated action.Full episode transcript, photos, and more background info here: https://stevepocock.com.au/podcastCheck out my Nuffield report here: https://www.nuffieldscholar.org/reports/zw/2024/future-farming-zimbabwe-realising-resilient-inclusive-and-sustainable-agricultural
In Episode 5, I shift from context to solutions and focus on practical steps to lift agricultural productivity in Zimbabwe.I break it into two big priorities. First, how to back the commercial farming sector as an economic engine that drives exports, jobs, innovation, and investment across the value chain. Second, how to lift millions of smallholders out of low yield subsistence farming through a more targeted approach to support, and through market linkages that help small scale commercial farmers become viable businesses.I also talk about how these two pillars connect, and why Zimbabwe needs both working at the same time if we want a more productive, resilient, and opportunity rich agricultural economy.Full episode transcript, photos, and more background info here: https://stevepocock.com.au/podcastCheck out my Nuffield report here: https://www.nuffieldscholar.org/reports/zw/2024/future-farming-zimbabwe-realising-resilient-inclusive-and-sustainable-agricultural
In Episode 4, I zoom out and share some of the most useful lessons I picked up during my Nuffield travels, and translate them into what could actually work in Zimbabwe.I focus on two big, practical dilemmas. 1. Labour: when cheap labour is an advantage, when it becomes a trap, and how Zimbabwe can shift people into better jobs across processing and value chains as productivity rises. 2. Climate change: how it’s already reshaping agriculture across the world, and what Zimbabwe can do about it, from getting serious about irrigation and resilience, to putting the right crops in the right places.Full episode transcript, photos, and more background info here: ⁠https://stevepocock.com.au/podcast⁠Check out my Nuffield report here: ⁠https://www.nuffieldscholar.org/reports/zw/2024/future-farming-zimbabwe-realising-resilient-inclusive-and-sustainable-agricultural
In Episode 3, I get out of the policy world and onto the farms themselves. To understand where Zimbabwean agriculture is today, you need to see it through the eyes of the people working the land.I walk through three different realities: a subsistence farmer in a drought-prone communal area, a young small scale commercial farmer trying to build a business on an A2 farm, and a large scale commercial producer competing in export markets. Their situations are very different, but they’re tied together by the same system and many of the same constraints.The point of the episode is simple: when you understand these three perspectives, you can start to see what needs to change, and where the real opportunities are.Full episode transcript, photos, and more background info here: https://stevepocock.com.au/podcastCheck out my Nuffield report here: https://www.nuffieldscholar.org/reports/zw/2024/future-farming-zimbabwe-realising-resilient-inclusive-and-sustainable-agricultural
In Episode 2, we get into the early 2000s land redistribution, and the current state of Zimbabwean agriculture.I walk through what triggered the Fast Track Land Reform Programme, how it unfolded, and the big on-the-ground impacts it had on farming: the loss of skills and systems, the collapse of investment when land stopped being bankable collateral, and how those changes fed into a broader national economic crisis.Then we fast-forward to today. What does agriculture actually look like now? I unpack the reality for smallholders and commercial producers, and the main policies and programmes shaping the rebuild - what’s working, what isn’t, and where the real opportunities are.Full episode transcript, photos, and more background info here: https://stevepocock.com.au/podcastCheck out my Nuffield report here: https://www.nuffieldscholar.org/reports/zw/2024/future-farming-zimbabwe-realising-resilient-inclusive-and-sustainable-agricultural
In Episode 1, I set the foundation for this six-part series on the future of farming in Zimbabwe.I share my own story - growing up on a farm near Gweru, losing it during the Fast Track Land Reform period, and later returning to Zimbabwe to work on rural development. Then we zoom out and go back to the beginning: how Zimbabwe’s colonial land policies created “two farms” - a well-resourced commercial sector built for export, and overcrowded communal areas locked out of capital, research, and opportunity.This history is the backdrop to everything that follows - and it sets up Episode 2, where we tackle the Fast Track Land Reform Programme and the economic shockwaves that reshaped Zimbabwean agriculture.Full episode transcript, photos, and more background info here: https://stevepocock.com.au/podcast Check out my Nuffield report here: https://www.nuffieldscholar.org/reports/zw/2024/future-farming-zimbabwe-realising-resilient-inclusive-and-sustainable-agricultural
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