' Milking the Cow Without Feeding It ' : Perceptions of Communities on Water-user Fees for Smallholder Irrigation in Ruaha Sub-Basin, Tanzania
Keywords:
water-user fees, water resources, smallholder irrigators, Ruaha sub-basin, TanzaniaAbstract
Abstract Water-user fees in Tanzania, like in other low-income countries, have been introduced mainly as a response to neo-liberal thinking which, among other things, believes that water has an economic value and should be recognized as an economic good. The objective of this study was to understand perceptions on water-user fees among smallholder farmers in the Ruaha Sub-basin, Tanzania. It employed qualitative and quantitative tools, including in-depth interviews, focus group discussions, and questionnaires. Qualitative data were analysed using a thematic approach, while quantitative data were analysed using SPSS Version 20. The findings revealed that mostsmallholder irrigators were dissatisfied with the payment, amount, and the use of water fees. There were three major reasons for the high level of dissatisfaction. First, owners of private water-use permits did not see why they should pay for water that had no (physical) investment on it. Second, some owners of group water-use permits were unwilling to pay for water because they felt that they did not get adequate support from the government since all irrigation water-related operational costs, including the constructions and maintenance of irrigation canals, were undertaken by themselves. The lack of community participation in determining the amount of water-user fees and ad-hoc changes of the amount of the fees was another reason for the dissatisfaction. This paper proposes some recommendations for effective management of water resources at a community levelReferences
References
Boelens, R. & R. Bustamante (2005). Formal Law and Local Water Control in the Andean
Region: A Field of Fierce Contestation. Paper Presented at International Workshop on
African Water Laws: Plural Legislative Framework for Rural Water Management in
Africa, 26-28 January, 2005, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Braun, V. & Clarke, V. (2006). Using thematic analysis in psychology, Qualitative Research
in Psychology, 3 (2), Taylor & Francis.
Chikozho, C. & K. Kujinga, (2017). Managing Water Supply Systems Using Free-Market
Economy Approaches: A Detailed Review of the Implications for Developing
Countries. Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, 100: 363 €“ 370, Elsevier.
Chikozho, C. & E. Mapedza, (2017). Free-Market Economics and Development Statism as
Political Paradigms: Implications for Water Governance Theory and Practice in Developing
Countries. In: E. Karar (ed.). Freshwater Governance for the 21st Century. Springer Open.
Chikozho, C. (2010). The Realities and Challenges of Reforming the Water Sector in Zimbabwe.
Berlin: VDM Verlag Publishers.
Chikozho, C. (2008). Globalizing Integrated Water Resources Management: A
Complicated Option in South Africa. Water Resources Management, 22: 1241 €“ 1257.
Clarke, R. (1991). Water - The International Crisis. London: Earthscan.
Cosgrove, W. & F. Rijberman, (2000). A Water Secure World. World Water Vision
Commission Report: The Hague, The Netherlands.
Falkenmark, M., J. Lundqvist & C. Windstrand, (1990). Water Scarcity: An Ultimate
Constraint in Third Word Development: A Reader on a Forgotten Dimension in Dry Climate
Tropics and Subtropics. Linkoping: University of Linkoping.
Global Water Partnership (GWP). (2000). Integrated Water Resources Management. TEC
Background Paper No. 4, Stockholm: Global Water Partnership.
Global Water Partnership (GWP). (2012). The Handbook for Integrated Water Resources
Management in Transboundary Basins of Rivers, Lakes and Aquifers. Geneva: GWP.
Gupta, J. (2011). An Essay on Global Water Governance and Research Challenges. In: M.
Van der Valk & P. Keenan (eds.). Principles of Good Governance at Different Water
Governance Levels, UNESCO.
Hoggan, D. H. O. W. Asplund, J. C. Anderson & D. G. Houston, (1977). A Study of
Feasibility of State Water-user Fees for Financing Water Development. Report Paper 412.
International Conference on Water and the Environment (ICWE). (1992). Dublin
Statement on Water and Sustainable Development. Dublin, Ireland.
Kouassi-Komlan, E. & C. Fonseca. (2004). Micro Finance for Water and Sanitation in
West Africa. In: Proceedings of the 30th WEDC International Conference, Vientiane, Lao PDR,
, on People-centred approaches to water and environmental sanitation: doi: http://
www.irc.nl/page/459, (Accessed on 15th May 2014).
Lein, H. & M. Tagseth, (2009). Tanzania Water Policy Reforms: Between Principles and
Practical Applications. Water Policy, 11(02): 203 €“ 220.
Maganga, F.P. (2003). Incorporating Customary Laws in Implementation of IWRM: Some
Insights from Rufiji River Basin. Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, 28: 995 €“ 1000, Elsevier.
Magayane, M. D. & Mdemu, V. M. (2005). Conflict of Water-use Between Hydropower and
Irrigation in Tanzania: The Conundrum of Sectoral Policy Approaches to Water Resources
Development, doi: http://www.tzonline.org/pdf/conflictofwater.
Meinzen-Dick, R. (2007). Beyond Panaceas in Water Institutions. In: Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A., 104(39): National Academy of Sciences.
Nyarko, K.B., S. Oduru-Kwarteng & I. Adama. (2007). Cost Recovery of Communitymanaged Piped Water Systems in Ashanti Region, Ghana. Water and Environmental
Journal, 21: 92-99.
Odgaard, R. & F.P. Maganga. (1995). Local Informal Land and Water Management Systems
in the Great Ruaha Basin, http://www.sciencedirect.com, (Retrieved, 6th June 2014).