
ISET Economist Blog

According to available data from the ministry of agriculture (MoA), by 1 May 2013, 400,000 hectares have been cultivated this year in Georgia, which means a 100% increase compared to last year and the highest figure, by far, since 2005. In fact, this is the highest yearly increase in cultivated area Georgia recorded during the last decades.
In total, Georgia has around 800,000 hectares of agricultural land (i.e. land suitable for cultivation).
Table: Georgian agricultural land in cultivation (hectares), 1990-2013
Source: MoA
No data by region is currently available. In principle, one could expect an even increase across the country, given that the main driver of this is the MoA plowing + vouchers program, which targets all districts in Georgia. In fact, there are certain factors that will create differences across regions. To name just a few:
By the '80s Georgia reached its historical maximum of 700,000 cultivated hectares. Then, the period 1990 to 1995 saw a total collapse of the sector, due to the conflict situation that the country was living through at the time and the effects of the collapse of the Soviet Union. 250,000 hectares of land, which have been traditionally cultivated, were abandoned.
In the period 1995 to 2004 the sector started a very slow but sustained recovery, and sown area augmented by 150,000 hectares.
The period 2004 to 2012 saw the second collapse of agriculture. This time it was not caused by wars or economic crises but by a deliberate policy to neglect the primary production. The country lost almost 400,000 hectares of cultivated lands, i.e. 2/3 of the total area cultivated before that period.