From Stewardship to Scarcity: How the Hut Tax Dismantled Kenyan Agriculture
From Stewardship to Scarcity: How the Hut Tax Dismantled Kenyan Agriculture The history of Kenyan agriculture is often told through the lens of modernization, but for the indigenous communities of the Rift Valley, the colonial era marked a violent pivot from ecological stewardship to forced economic extraction. At the heart of this transformation was the Hut Tax , a 1901 British policy that served as the primary engine for dismantling self-sufficient African farming systems. The Financial Trap: Currency as a Weapon Before 1901, many Kenyan communities operated on a wealth-based system measured in livestock, grain, and honey. The Hut Tax changed this by requiring every household to pay an annual sum in British currency. This created an artificial and immediate need for "hard cash," forcing farmers into a dilemma: they could no longer simply feed their families; they had to produce for the Crown. This shift triggered a cascade of disruptions: The Rise of Monocultur...