cs2016 agricultural households release 27 january 2017

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Community Survey 2016 Agricultural households Dr Pali Lehohla Statistics South Africa

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Page 1: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Community  Survey  2016

Agricultural  households

Dr  Pali  LehohlaStatistics  South  Africa

Page 2: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Agricultural  statistics  are  key  to  the  measurement  of  the  performance  of  the  agricultural  sector.  It  is  used  to  inform  policies  

and  strategies  on  poverty,  food  security,  environmental  sustainability    and  rural  development.  

Page 3: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

CS2016  shows  that  around  (2,33M)  of  all  households  in  SA  are  agricultural  households  compared  to  19,9% (2,88M)  in  2011.  The  decrease  was  mainly  due  to  the  severe  drought  in  2014/15.

Page 4: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

48  79869  152

157  510 167  780

225  282 242  594

386  660

495  042

KwaZulu-­‐Natal

0

100000

200000

300000

400000

500000

600000

Northern  CapeWestern  Cape Free  State North  West Mpumalanga Gauteng Limpopo Eastern  Cape KwaZulu-­‐Natal

Number  of  Agricultural  households  by  province

536  225

KwaZulu-­‐Natal  has  the  highest  number  of  Agricultural  Households  in  South  Africa

Page 5: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Eastern  Cape

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

Western  Cape   Gauteng North  West Northern  Cape Free  State Mpumalanga KwaZulu-­‐Natal Limpopo Eastern  Cape

Eastern    Cape    has  the  highest  proportion  of  Agricultural  HH

at  27,9%

Percentage  of  Agricultural  households  by  province

Page 6: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Working  Age  15-­‐64,77,0%

Elderly  65+,22,9%

Agricultural  households  by  age  group  2016

The  proportions  of  Agricultural  HH  has  remained  consistent  between  CS  2016  and  Census  

2011  

Page 7: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Percentage  of  Agricultural  households  by  age  group  and  head  of  household  gender   Male  Headed  

Agricultural  HH  are  a  larger  proportion  in  all  age  groups  except  

65+

Age  Grou

p

0,1%

1,0%

2,2%

3,1%

4,4%

4,5%

5,5%

6,0%

5,4%

5,5%

5,3%

3,9%

2,5%

1,7%

0,8%

0,6%

0,0%

0,5%

1,3%

2,1%

3,1%

3,2%

4,2%

5,2%

4,9%

4,9%

4,4%

4,3%

3,1%

2,7%

1,6%

1,6%

8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6

<  15

15-­‐19

20-­‐24

25-­‐29

30-­‐34

35-­‐39

40-­‐44

45-­‐49

50-­‐54

55-­‐59

60-­‐64

65-­‐69

70-­‐74

75-­‐79

80-­‐84

>85

Male Female

Page 8: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

73,0%

75,2%

76,2%

77,0%

77,7%

78,1%

78,2%

78,3%

81,8%

84,4%

26,8%

24,6%

23,8%

22,9%

22,2%

21,9%

21,8%

21,6%

18,2%

15,6%

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Eastern  Cape  Limpopo  

KwaZulu-­‐Natal  South  Africa  North  West  

Mpumalanga  Western  Cape  Northern  Cape  

Free  State  Gauteng  

Working  Age  (15  to  64) Elderly  65+

Agricultural  households  by  Province  and  age  group  2016

On  average  77,0  %  of  South  African  Agricultural  Households  are  within  the  Working  Age  (15-­‐64)  

*  Due  to  rounding  numbers  may  not  add  up  to  100%

Page 9: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

Western  Cape   Eastern  Cape   Northern  Cape   Free  State   KwaZulu-­‐Natal   North  West   Gauteng   Mpumalanga   Limpopo   South  Africa  

2011  Elderly  65+   2016  Elderly  65+  

Agricultural  households  by  Province  and    Elderly  65+  age  group  2011  vs  2016

For  population  aged  65+  only    Western  Cape  (7%  Point  increase  from  2011)  and  Gauteng  (4%  Point  

increase  from  2011)  were  significantly  different  from  Census  2011

Page 10: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

15,5%

8,6%

4,6%3,2%

13,8%

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

16%

18%

Black  African White Coloured Indian/Asian Total

Agricultural  households

Number  of  agricultural  households  by  population  group

Black  Africans    have  the  highest  proportion  of  households  involved  in  Agricultural  

Households

Page 11: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

The  majority  (56,3%)  of  Agricultural  HH  have  between  

Grade  1  and  Grade  11  Education

Percentage  of  agricultural  households  by  Education  Level:  No  Schooling

3,6%

7,6%

10,7%

16,7% 17,2%18,6%

22,7%24,0%

26,3%

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

Western  Cape Gauteng Free  State North  West Eastern  Cape South  Africa KwaZulu-­‐Natal Limpopo Mpumalanga

While  only  3,6%  of  WC  Agricultural  HH  have  No  Schooling  32,1%  of  WC  

Agricultural  Households  have  Tertiary  Education,  possibly  also  reflecting  on  the  leisure  aspect  of  farming  in  WC

Page 12: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Agricultural  HH  main  purpose  of  involvement  in  agricultural  activities:  For  leisure/  hobby  2016

3,1%4,8% 5,0% 5,3% 6,1% 6,8% 6,8%

11,0% 11,0%

26,9%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

Eastern  Cape Mpumalanga Free  State North  West KwaZulu-­‐Natal Limpopo South  Africa Northern  Cape Gauteng Western  Cape

26,9%  of  Western  Cape  Agricultural  Households  

participated  in  this  activity  with  the  main  purpose  of  

Leisure/Hobby

Page 13: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

The  number  of  agricultural  households  in  the  country  decreased  by  19,1%  (550  000)  from  2,88  million  in  Census  2011  to  2,33  million  in  Community  Survey  2016

Page 14: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Drought  conditions  have  prevailed  in  South  Africa

2013/14 2014/15 2015/16

Page 15: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

South  Africa-­‐19,1%

LP-­‐2,8%

MP-­‐1,3%

KZN-­‐6,3%

EC-­‐3,5%

FS-­‐1,5%

NW-­‐1,6%

NC-­‐0,2%

WC-­‐0,5%

GP-­‐1,3%

The  major  contributing  provinces  to  the  decrease  are  KwaZulu-­Natal  (-­6,3%  points  or  180  781  agricultural  households),  

Eastern  Cape  (-­3,5%  points  or  101  531)  and  Limpopo  (-­2,8%  points  or  81  834).

Contributing  provinces  to  the  decreaseshown  in  percentage  point  change

Page 16: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Agricultural  Households  vary  in  reason  for  pursuing  this  activity

Page 17: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Agricultural  HH  Main  purpose of  involvement  in  agricultural  activities

Other,  1,6% Extrasource  of  household

income,  4,7% Mainsource  of  household

income,  5,7%

For  leisure/  hobby,  6,8%

Extra  source  of  household  food,  37,5%

Mainsource  of  householdfood,  43,7%

81,2%    of  Agricultural  HH  list  source  of  food  (extra  or  main) as  the  key  reason  for  agricultural  activities

Page 18: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

25,4%

29,9%

38,6%

40,8%

43,5%

43,7%

44,1%

45,2%

48,0%

52,7%

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%

Western  Cape

Northern  Cape

Limpopo

KwaZulu-­‐Natal

Gauteng

South  Africa

North  West

Free  State

Mpumalanga

Eastern  Cape

Agricultural  HH  main  purpose  of  involvement  in  agricultural  activities:  Main  Source  of  Food

Over  twice  as  many  Agricultural  HH  in  EC  conduct  agricultural  activities  with  the  purpose  being  main  source  of  food  compared  to  Western  

Cape

Page 19: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Location  of  farming  practice

Page 20: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Distribution  of  agricultural  households  by  main  place  of  agricultural  activities  and  population  group  of  the  household  head

85,8%

58,7%

85,5% 90,3%

6,4%

37,9%

9,0%6,7%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Black  African White Coloured Indian/Asian

Back  yard Farm  land Communalland

School,  church  or  other  organisationalland

Other

Significant  difference  between  the  White  and  Other  

population  groups  in  regards  to  main  place  of  activity  

Page 21: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Agricultural  Households  engage  in  a  variety  of  activities

Page 22: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

10  956

44  917

399  151

574  684

873  355

990  210

1  120  233

0 200000 400000 600000 800000 1000000 1200000

Industrial  crops

Other

Fruit  production

Grain  and  foodcrops

Vegetable  production

Livestock  production

Poultry  production

South  Africa

Number  of  agricultural  households  involved  in  a  specific  activity

Page 23: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Mpumalanga;  40,5%

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50%

Both  irrigarion  and  dry  land

Free  State;  39,0%

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50%

Irrigation

Number  of  agricultural  households  (crop  production)  by  farming  practice

Northern  Cape;  46,3%

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50%

Western  Cape

Eastern  Cape

Northern  Cape

Free  State

KwaZulu-­‐Natal

North  West

Gauteng

Mpumalanga

Limpopo

South  Africa

Dry  land

Page 24: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

3,2  Million

0 2 4

Free  State

Western  Cape

Gauteng

Mpumalanga

North  West

Northern  Cape

Limpopo

Kwazulu-­‐Natal

Eastern  Cape

Millions

Goats

2,8  Million

0 1 2 3

Gauteng

Northern  Cape

Western  Cape

Limpopo

Mpumalanga

Free  State

North  West

Kwazulu-­‐Natal

Eastern  Cape

Millions

Cattle

7,6  Million

0 4 8

Gauteng

Limpopo

Kwazulu-­‐Natal

North  West

Mpumalanga

Western  Cape

Free  State

Northern  Cape

Eastern  Cape

Millions

Sheep

Number  of  livestock  by  type  at  household  level  and  province

The  Eastern  Cape  leads  in  absolute  number  of  various  types  of  livestock  

within  the  country  

Page 25: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Western  Cape Eastern  Cape Northern  Cape Free  State KwaZulu-­‐Natal North  West Gauteng Mpumalanga Limpopo100+ 5,7% 19,7% 7,0% 19,0% 10,3% 16,3% 4,9% 10,8% 6,4%

11-­‐100   1,3% 22,8% 3,5% 5,2% 27,0% 10,4% 3,5% 11,1% 15,3%

1-­‐10 0,4% 34,1% 1,4% 4,7% 28,9% 7,1% 1,3% 8,0% 14,1%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

Free  State  has  a  significant  number  of  Larger  scale  (100+)  Agricultural  HH  engaging  in  Cattle  farming  within  South  Africa  as  a  whole,  however  KZN  and  Eastern  Cape  dominate  smaller  scale  cattle  farming

Provincial  distribution  of  agricultural  households  engaged  in  Cattle    farming  (percentage)  within  SA  as  a  whole

Page 26: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Western  Cape Eastern  Cape Northern  Cape Free  State KwaZulu-­‐Natal North  West Gauteng Mpumalanga Limpopo100+ 12,1% 35,6% 19,8% 15,9% 3,6% 4,9% 1,2% 5,7% 1,3%

11-­‐100   1,7% 65,6% 5,5% 3,7% 5,5% 7,7% 3,8% 2,7% 3,9%

1-­‐10 1,4% 50,0% 4,9% 3,7% 13,9% 10,2% 3,4% 3,7% 8,8%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

Eastern  Cape  and  Northern  Cape,  have  between  them  over  55%  of  all  larger  scale  (100+)  sheep  farming  Agricultural  HH  within  South  Africa.  EC  also  dominates  sheep  farming  of  flocks  between  11  and  100      

Provincial  distribution  of  agricultural  households  engaged  in  sheep  farming  (percentage)  within  SA  as  a  whole

Page 27: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

However  significant  increases in  number  of  Agricultural  HH  involved  in  small  scale  (1-­‐10  animals)  pig  farming

From  just  around    100  000    to  192  000  AH  between  2011  and  2016  due  in  large  part    to  77  000  increase  of  small  scale    AH  in  the  Eastern  Cape  engaging  in  Pig  Farming

-­‐7,4%  between  2011  and  2016

+6,5%  between  2011  and  2016

Up  91,1  %  between  2011  and  2016

Small  scale  farming  in  SA  (1  -­‐10  Animals)

-­‐15,0%  between  2011  and  2016

Number  of  agricultural  households  grouped  by  number  of  Animals  (1  – 10)  between  2016  and  2011  

Page 28: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Municipal  Focus

Page 29: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Agricultural  HH  by  MunicipalityCensus  2011

35,4%  of  the  households  in  Eastern  Cape  were  engaged  in  agriculture,  followed  by  Limpopo(33,0%)  and  KwaZulu-­‐Natal  (28,2%)

Agricultural  HH  by  MunicipalityCensus  2011

Census  2011

Page 30: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Agricultural  HH  by  MunicipalityCS  2016

The  highest  proportion  of  agricultural  households  are  still  in  Eastern  Cape  (27,9%),Limpopo  (24,1%)  and  KwaZulu-­‐Natal  (18,6%).

Agricultural  HH  by  MunicipalityCS  2016

CS  2016

Page 31: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Decreases  in  Agricultural  Households  between  2011  and  2016

Page 32: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Umhlabuyalingana

Indaka

Jozin

i

Non

goma

Mtubatuba

Ulun

di

Umzim

khulu

Hlabisa

Maphu

mulo

Nkand

la

-­‐35%

-­‐30%

-­‐25%

-­‐20%

-­‐15%

-­‐10%

-­‐5%

0%

Top  10  Percentage  Point  Decrease  in  Agricultural  HH  by  MunicipalityBetween  Census  2011  and  CS  2016

Umhlabuyalingana  had  a  31,6  Percentage  Point  decrease  in  the  number  of  Agricultural  HH  from  59,4%  in  2011  to  27,8%  in  2016

Page 33: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

%

KwaZulu-­‐Natal  has  faced  significant  decreases  in  number  of  Agricultural  HH

Top  10  Percentage  Point  Decrease  in  Agricultural  HH  by  MunicipalityBetween  Census  2011  and  CS  2016

Top  10  Percentage  Point  Decrease  in  Agricultural  HH  by  MunicipalityBetween  Census  2011  and  CS  2016

Page 34: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

According  to  the  World  Food  Summit,  food  security  exists  when  all  people,  at  all  times,  havephysical  and  economic  access  to  sufficient,  safe,  nutritious  food  to  meet  their  dietary  needs  andfood  preferences  for  an  active  life  (FAO,  1996).  

Food  security  was  prioritised by  the  South  African  government  in  2010  and  is  closely  linked  to  source  of  income,  household  structure,  health,  access  to  water  and  education  (Du  Toit,  2011).  

Page 35: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Percentage  of  Households  who  skipped  a  meal  in  the  past  12  months  CS  2016

Percentage  of  Households  who  skipped  a  meal  in  the  past  12  months  CS  2016

%

Page 36: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017

Percentage  of  Households  that  Ran  out  of  money  to  buy  food  in  past  12  months

Around  one-­‐fifth  (19,9%)  of  

households  in  the  country  reported  that  they  had  run  out  of  money  to  

buy  food  in  the  past  12  months.  

Percentage  of  Households  that  Ran  out  of  money  to  buy  food  in  past  12  months

%

Page 37: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017
Page 38: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017
Page 39: CS2016 agricultural households release 27 January 2017