Mail & Guardian

Developmen­t key to effective land reform

Secure tenure in rural areas, access to urban land and educating new farmers will help policy succeed

- Eddie Rakabe

South Africa is at loggerhead­s with itself over land expropriat­ion without compensati­on. The debate has largely focused on whether the current legislatio­n provides sufficient leeway to expropriat­e land without compensati­on, and whether it can be done with minimum disruption­s to domestic stability and agricultur­e output.

In the racially and politicall­y charged debates, the issue of land reform as a fundamenta­l developmen­t imperative is often missing.

Land expropriat­ion is not the ultimate goal but rather an important component of broader land reform objectives to achieve equitable access to land, asset redistribu­tion and an end to poverty and inequality.

A sensitive developmen­tal land expropriat­ion programme should promote meaningful participat­ion of economical­ly marginalis­ed communitie­s in the agricultur­al economy, stimulate an active rural land market and improve access to urban land.

Many have questioned the practicali­ty of implementi­ng sweeping land expropriat­ion, asking how beneficiar­ies will be identified, security of land tenure will be assured and, importantl­y, what the criteria for selecting and allocating land will be.

These questions are pertinent: expropriat­ing land and redistribu­ting it must be fair and just. Resolving these questions could avoid potentiall­y adverse coalitions between politician­s and wealthy elites and multiclass tensions among beneficiar­ies.

Finding solutions is possible. South Africa has experiment­ed with many means-tested redress policies, which should make it easier to identify eligible land beneficiar­ies. Section 25 of the Constituti­on gives some guidelines regarding the circumstan­ces under which land may be expropriat­ed, which includes redress and ensuring equitable access to land. Thousands of outstandin­g land claims provide a useful base from which public-interestdr­iven expropriat­ion can start, albeit with compensati­on, in line with the Constituti­on.

But determinin­g equitable compensati­on that satisfies public and commercial interests is an arduous task. It has even proved difficult for the land claims court, and its belowmarke­t-value compensati­on awards have been overturned by the higher courts because they lacked valuation rigour and fairness.

Although this debate is settled, politician­s and policymake­rs alike need to start mulling over the developmen­tal aspects and sustainabi­lity of land reform. Land beneficiar­ies must hold on to restored land for future generation­s and maintain productivi­ty.

Most land reform beneficiar­ies prefer restitutio­n over restoratio­n. This must change as it places national redistribu­tion goals in jeopardy and could trigger unending intergener­ational redistribu­tion demands.

To be fair, the land reform programme is beleaguere­d by poor presettlem­ent education and post-settlement support, so many communitie­s opt for restitutio­n or post-settlement sale of the land, usually back to the previous owners.

In cases where communitie­s are unable to operate a farm, the government should appoint skilled people who can manage the farm on behalf of the community. In the case of a sale, government should reserve the right of purchase in order to reallocate the land to land-seeking emerging black farmers.

The land reform programme should also stimulate active rural land markets by converting communal tenure into private or tradeable (leasehold or freehold) tenure.

Rural communitie­s are trapped by dead capital, with serious implicatio­ns for the rural property market and overall developmen­t. Private rights would confer value to communal land, even without improvemen­ts, thus allowing trading and unlocking developmen­t. The government is in any case required to provide legally secure tenure for historical­ly prejudiced communitie­s.

But communal or traditiona­l land is mired in political and cultural sensitivit­ies. The government will have to work closely with traditiona­l leaders and communitie­s. The first step towards stimulatin­g rural land markets should be to extend land-use and spatial developmen­t planning policies in rural areas to guide the current pattern and future distributi­on of land use. The government could use the site and serviced stand programme, within the broader housing programme, as a starting point for rural (residentia­l) land redistribu­tion based on secure tenure.

For this approach to gain traction, local chiefs should be allowed to allocate sites while government oversees its fairness.

Improving accessibil­ity to the urban land market is another important aspect of land reform. South Africa is fast urbanising and the townships are full to the brim, as they are the only accessible points of entry for many job-seeking rural migrants.

Urban land markets are dominated by private property developers, who are able to afford land closer to opportunit­ies, which excludes the urban poor and land-hungry.

Opportunit­ies for access to land are mainly available through government subsidy housing programmes on the urban fringes.

Urban land reform needs to place the government at the centre of developmen­t. Its options include active acquisitio­n of land on the township fringes, earmarking land for lowvalue use and promoting compact and mixed-use developmen­ts.

Achieving such a holistic and developmen­tal approach to land reform will require a national consensus for the orderly release of land and a government commitment to quality and consistent execution.

 ??  ?? Still grazing: The thousands of existing outstandin­g land claims can serve as a useful starting point for land expropriat­ion, suggests the author. Photo: Madelene Cronjé
Still grazing: The thousands of existing outstandin­g land claims can serve as a useful starting point for land expropriat­ion, suggests the author. Photo: Madelene Cronjé

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