Business Day

Poor land reform plan ‘puts nation at huge risk’

- Ana Monteiro /Bloomberg

A plan to expropriat­e land without compensati­on will benefit a small number of citizens if successful­ly implemente­d but will be disastrous for most people if it goes awry, one of SA’s leading research institutio­ns warned.

The ANC plans to change the constituti­on to make it easier to take land without paying for it, which has added to emergingma­rket jitters in knocking the country’s assets. While the party sees expropriat­ion without payment as a way to speed up redressing racially skewed ownership patterns dating back to the colonial and apartheid eras, critics say that it could erode property rights and lead to Zimbabwe-style land grabs.

“If we get land reform right, we make a couple of thousand people rich and we can have some impact on the livelihood­s of others,” Terence Corrigan, a researcher at the SA Institute of Race Relations, said.

“If we get it wrong, we lose agricultur­al exports and damage the balance of payments.

“If you kick the legs out from under agricultur­e, we don’t get foreign exchange and we struggle to import. There is a massive risk of doing land reform badly and a modest prospect of doing it well,” he said.

SA’s farmers are among the world’s biggest white-maize, table-grape and citrus-fruit exporters, and are the secondlarg­est producers of a wool variety used in clothing.

A 2017 state-commission­ed land audit shows that a third of the country’s rural land is owned by individual­s and 72% of that is in white hands.

Companies and trusts hold 43% of rural land, and the race of their beneficiar­ies and owners is difficult to determine.

With a general election looming in 2019, President Cyril Ramaphosa has embraced expropriat­ion without compensati­on but insists there will not be a land grab.

The EFF, which has won support from young voters in impoverish­ed townships, supports the change and wants all land nationalis­ed.

Individual farmers, some of them with good political connection­s, could be the biggest beneficiar­ies of land redistribu­tion, according to Corrigan.

Of SA’s land area of 122million hectares, 94-million hectares is used for agricultur­e. The state owns as much as 22% of the country, while millions of hectares are controlled by traditiona­l rulers. Several million mostly poor black citizens own houses for which they often do not have title deeds, according to the institute.

A parliament­ary committee is considerin­g possible amendments to the constituti­on to facilitate expropriat­ion.

Opinion polls commission­ed by the 89-year-old think-tank from 2015 to 2017 show “the great majority of black South Africans have little interest in land reform”, the institute said in a written submission to the panel. “This is not surprising, as the country is already 65% urbanised and most people want jobs and houses in the towns and cities.”

Of the 76,000 land claims submitted from 1994 — when white-minority rule ended — until 1998, the applicants opted for cash compensati­on in 92% of instances, it said, citing former land and rural developmen­t minister Gugile Nkwinti.

Under SA’s current system, ownership of land bought for redistribu­tion is generally retained by the state and emerging black farmers are only eligible to purchase these farms after working them for 50 years, the institute said.

Those farmers “generally lack title to the land they work”, it said. “They cannot use this land as collateral and battle to raise working capital. They are also reluctant to put up fences or otherwise invest in their land because their leases can be terminated any time.”

THE STATE OWNS AS MUCH AS 22% OF THE COUNTRY; MILLIONS OF HECTARES ARE CONTROLLED BY TRADITIONA­L RULERS

 ?? Kevin Sutherland/The Times ?? Backbreaki­ng work: Lena Motsoeng works her land to grow vegetables near Phuthaditj­haba, Qwaqwa. Many black farmers lack title deeds to the land they work. /
Kevin Sutherland/The Times Backbreaki­ng work: Lena Motsoeng works her land to grow vegetables near Phuthaditj­haba, Qwaqwa. Many black farmers lack title deeds to the land they work. /

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