The Citizen (Gauteng)

Jobs most urgent worry

SURVEY: LAND AS A PRIORITY FOR SOUTH AFRICANS WAS ONLY 13TH ON LIST

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Most respondent­s feel expropriat­ion without compensati­on not the answer.

Despite the implied national furore over the land debate, it turns out that most South Africans of voting age prioritise jobs and security over land ownership issues as their most urgent concerns.

This is according to data analytics firm Afrobarome­ter, which conducted a survey of 1 800 adults in August and September.

The highlighte­d findings in the survey’s report suggested that most people were in favour of more moderate land policies than expropriat­ion.

During the presentati­on of the report yesterday, the company revealed that between 2002 and 2015, land as a priority only resonated with around 2% of the population and it only rose to priority status in 2018 for 7% of the sampled groups.

In the list of priorities, Communicat­ions director at Afribarome­ter Sibusiso Nkomo said the top three, according to their research, were employment, crime and security and then housing. Land as a priority was only 13th . This year, parliament adopted a motion by the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) endorsing the expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on, setting in motion a process led by the Constituti­onal Review Committee of signing an expropriat­ion policy into law.

But Nkomo suggested political parties, which have been at the centre of heated debates over land and property rights, were out of touch with the wants and needs of their voters.

Nkomo said this may have to do with the immediate needs of many South Africans who were unemployed or worried about job security because of poverty and, for similar reasons, were more worried about having a place to live.

This divide between the privileged and the poor presented itself in other parts of the survey.

Those who had full-time employment were more likely to agree with the willing buyer, willing seller policy than the unemployed.

But, in the same breath, the majority of younger people felt that property was too expensive.

Despite this, 55% of those surveyed were in favour of the willing buyer, willing seller policy staying in place in terms of land redistribu­tion.

In terms of land restitutio­n, more South Africans wanted land from which people were forcefully removed to be prioritise­d to this end.

Meanwhile, the draft report on public submission­s on whether to change the constituti­on in order to expropriat­e land was expected to be adopted by the end of this month.

This had seemed unlikely as parties in the committee have been at loggerhead­s over the use of all submission­s on the debate rather than the proposed 400, sampled, submission­s. –

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? Mikhail Mos, head a of a custom’s canine department, holds a bear paw confiscate­d from smugglers and used for training sniffer dogs, in front of custom officers from China during a workshop in the far eastern city of Vladivosto­k, Russia, yesterday.
Picture: Reuters Mikhail Mos, head a of a custom’s canine department, holds a bear paw confiscate­d from smugglers and used for training sniffer dogs, in front of custom officers from China during a workshop in the far eastern city of Vladivosto­k, Russia, yesterday.

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