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Main Sectors in the Gambian Economy The Gambia is heavily dependent upon agriculture, which in the late 1990's accounted for a quarter of the GDP. This dependency becomes even clearer when we look at the labour force, where three quarters are engaged in agriculture. Further, agriculture mostly consists of subsistence farming, livestock raising and cultivation of groundnuts for export.
The Gambia has no important mineral or other natural resources and has a limited agricultural base. Small-scale manufacturing activity features the processing of peanuts, fish, and hides. Re-export trade normally constitutes a major segment of economic activity, but the 50% devaluation of the CFA franc in January 1994 together with the closure of the Senegalese border made Senegalese goods more competitive and hurt the re-export trade. The private sector, led by tourism, trading, and fisheries, is experiencing modest growth. However, a high population growth rate has diluted the positive effects of economic expansion. Per capita gross domestic product is estimated to be $360. General data
GDP
GDP composition by sector (1997 est.)
Labour force - by occupation Export commodities Agricultural production Livestock Fisheries Mining Industry Tourism
Service sector Tourism While the number of tourists (mainly European, from Germany, Britain and Scandinavia) grew considerably in the 1980's (to a peak of some 110.000 visitors in the 1988/89 season), it was consolidated around 90.000 annually in the early 1990's. The coup d'état in 1994 gave a serious flaw to tourism, following travel warnings from several Western countries. After the 1997/98 season, however, numbers again have reached the level of the early 1990's, again consolidating itself at some 80.000 visitors annually. Around 10.000 Gambians are employed directly or indirectly in the tourism industry, being a modest part of the labour force. Most of these only are engaged in seasonal contracts, following the 6 months tourist season. Having in mind that these employees support a large number of family members, as the tourist industry constitutes one of the few accesses to wage employment in The Gambia, it has been estimated that the industry might be the main cash income for some 5-10% of the Gambian population. Tourism has provided increased employment opportunities, but the net foreign exchange earned from this sector is considerably lower than gross earnings. This is because an estimated 50% of gross receipts are used to finance imported goods, including those used by the hotels.
Industry and manufacture
Agriculture
Crops
However, becoming self sufficient on food is not the only scope of the agricultural sector in The
Gambia. Even if the agricultural sector of The Gambia is mainly subsistence oriented, it is of
important value for the national economy. It is, however problematic to account the exact share
of agriculture to GDP. There are large variations within the data and the different ways of accounting
the share. Jabara (1990) operates with a share of the GDP of 34.6 % in 1974/75 and 34.1 in 1988/89.
These numbers include livestock, fisheries, and forestry. If we subtract these sub-sectors and only
account crop production, including subsistence farming, there has been a decrease from 28.4% in 1974/75
to 22.3 in 1988/89. Growth in the livestock and fishery sub-sectors has kept the share of GDP steady
during this era.
The agricultural sector's share of total GDP has dropped in the
1990's, due to the growth of the service sector. There is a disparity between the share of agriculture to the national income and household income. About three quarters of the population lives in rural areas. Most of the rural population is engaged in the agricultural sector. The 1983 census calculated the agricultural sector to absorb 73.6% of the total labour force. However, Gambian agriculture is labour intensive and the output per worker is low. Livestock The livestock production system in The Gambia, with the exception of the Greater Banjul Area and Western Division, is predominantly traditional, and production is aimed at a local (or family) market. The traditional livestock production system is extensive and subsistence in nature, with its socio-cultural attributes outweighing the economic aspects. This system has for decades concentrated on cattle development and is characterized by transhumance, which has evolved over the years of adaptation, in search of food and water and the evasion of diseases. The system mainly concentrates on increasing numbers. This, coupled with the rapid increase of the human population, has resulted in excessive pressures on the rangeland. Processing of livestock products hitherto is done on a very local scale. The products in question are meat, milk, eggs, hides and skins. Processing techniques used have so far prevented exports and a successful link to the tourism industry. The current production of meat and milk is generally considered low, and potentials for an increased meat production high. Credit continues to be a problem to livestock operators, such as to the traditional agricultural sector as a whole. Most farmers do not have access to credits from formal institutions and thus have to fall on non-institutional sources for their credit needs Forestry in the Gambia is of great domestic and local significance. The forested area covers some 10-12% of the country, but also the savanna area (covering some 40%) is used as a forestry resource. The forestry sector's contribution to GDP has yet to be adequately ascertained. In the mid 1980s the sector's contribution to the GDP was pegged at about 1%. However, this estimate did not take into consideration the very significant informal sector, such as local trade in non-wood forest products, the illegal trade in the timber industry as well the general contribution that forestry makes towards rural income through informal forest related activities. Being more than 90% dependent on wood as a source of domestic energy and having an agricultural economy (85% of the population are farmers), the pressure placed on the limited forest resources by the increasing population has been very high. The pressure is likely to continue increasing as The Gambia still has to identify an alternative and viable source of energy and as forest clearing for agricultural expansion and establishment of new settlements will continue into the future. Ownership of the forest resource is mostly collective. The 1991 State Lands Act made all lands in The Gambia state property, although provisions of this law recognize the individual or community usufruct right over the land. Traditionally people own trees that they have planted, and therefore tree planting is done on customary lands to secure ownership of this land. In 1995, 72,5% of the forested area was state owned, open access forest. 13,3% of the forest were unproductive mangroves, 13,8% protected areas and forest parks, while only 0,5% were community owned forest reserves. There is an ongoing process to change the ownership and tenure of the forest resources, and some 40% of the forests are planned to be transferred into community forest reserves. Fisheries The fisheries have become an essential source of foreign currency, contributing to 12,6% of Gambian projected exports in year 2000, according to the national budget. The government has invested heavily in the fisheries over the years, fish products being a more secure income source than other agricultural products such as groundnuts (fish prices generally keep rising due to global scarcity). Investments, thus, keep flowing. This year, Taiwan is to fund $3
million ice plant at Banjul beach, a five year ADB/FAO fisheries
development project ($12 million) is to start in 2000 and Japan is to
fund a fisheries ice plant and cold room at Tanji. The potential of
the riverine and marine fisheries are believed to be higher than the
actual exploitation of the resource. * Purchasing power parity: Purchasing power parity (PPP) calculations, rather than calculations from conversions at official currency exchange rates involve the use of standardized international dollar price weights. These are applied to the quantities of final goods and services produced in a given economy. The data derived from the PPP method provide the best available starting point for comparisons of economic strength and well-being between countries. C onsulted bibliography Bojang, Foday (1994), Forestry in The Gambia. A country paper prepared for the UNEP/CIFOR Project, Banjul.Carney (1986), The social history of Gambian rice production: an analysis of food security strategies, PhD thesis, Michigan State University, Ann Arbour. FAO (1995), Statistical Country Profile. Gambia 1984-95, Accra. FERAP (1996), Study on agro-food sectors in the Sahel, Banjul. FJP (1999), Summary Data: Government of The Gambia’s Budget for the year ending 31 December 2000, Banjul. Fyhri (1998), The Gambia: The complexity of modernizing the agricultural Sector in Africa, thesis in geography, University of Oslo. Available in our library! Gambia, The (1991), Livestock Sector Review, Banjul.
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