Daily Dispatch

· Support for land reforms

R500m over the medium term to finalisepe­nding restitutio­n claims

- BEKEZELA PHAKATHI

The government has emphasised support for the agricultur­al sector as part of efforts to promote faster and sustained inclusive economic growth.

The sector is seen as crucial in the drive to address the challenges of unemployme­nt, poverty and inequality.

Finance minister Tito Mboweni said that over the medium term, the government has allocated R495m to the department of agricultur­e, land reform & rural developmen­t to respond to biosecurit­y threats, and revitalise laboratori­es and quarantine stations to strengthen inspection services at ports of entry. This will improve compliance with internatio­nal standards and support exports.

SA was recently hit by an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease resulting in the World Organisati­on for Animal Health suspending the country’s disease-free zone status.

Zimbabwe, Botswana, Namibia, eSwatini and Mozambique banned SA meat imports pending the containmen­t of the disease. The SA beef industry is crucial to the economy and generates more than R2bn in exports a year. Mboweni said an additional R500m is to be reprioriti­sed over the medium term to finalise outstandin­g land restitutio­n claims.

This comes amid raging debate on land expropriat­ion without compensati­on (EWC), which has rattled investors.

The ANC resolved in 2017 to back EWC as a way of accelerati­ng land reform and addressing skewed ownership patterns that have changed little

Focus on providing landless South Africans access to land and promoting agrarian change

since SA’s first democratic elections in 1994. A parliament­ary ad hoc committee has published a draft bill to amend section 25 of the constituti­on, and will begin holding public hearings on Friday.

The department’s expenditur­e is expected to increase at an average annual rate of 2.4%, from R17.2bn in 2019/2020 to R18.5bn in 2022/2023. According to budget documents, the department’s focus on providing redress and equitable access to land is far reaching in that these provisions contribute to ensuring inclusive and sustainabl­e economic developmen­t.

Over the medium term, as part of the land restitutio­n programme, the department expects to finalise 1,411 restitutio­n claims at a cost of R8.7bn — 16.3% of the total budget.

The department will focus on providing landless South Africans access to land and promoting agrarian transforma­tion. In this regard, over the period ahead, the department aims to acquire about 312,218ha of strategica­lly located land, and provide agricultur­al inputs and infrastruc­ture to make resettled farms productive.

For this purpose, R2.9bn will be transferre­d to the agricultur­al land holding account over the medium-term expenditur­e framework (MTEF) period.

Since the initiative began in 2008/2009, about 1,675 farms have been created from more than 4.9 million hectares of land acquired.

According to budget documents, to streamline the provision of agricultur­al finance, the department will transfer R1.2bn over the MTEF period to the Land Bank, which will enable the institutio­n to offer blended finance (a combinatio­n of government grants and loans at cheaper rates) to emerging black farmers.

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