The Citizen (KZN)

Land reform, property rights

WHAT IT’S DOING WRONG AND WHAT MUST BE DONE. 60% of blacks have land outside the formal system but don’t have title deeds.

- Ben Cousins, Constance Mogale and Temba Nolutshung­u

There is widespread agreement that land reform in South Africa has failed but that the extent is convoluted by the lack of unreliable data. This was the view of Ben Cousins, a professor at the University of the Western Cape and founder of the Institute for Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies, at a recent event hosted by the Centre for Constituti­onal Rights and the South African Institute for Race Relations, supported by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation.

Cousins also contended that land reform in general required more applicable skills and that institutio­ns operate effectivel­y – something that is not currently happening.

“Elites have captured the land reform agenda and land reform has been politicall­y misdirecte­d under the hands of corrupt officials.

“But there is an emerging class of successful black commercial farmers,” he said.

He refuted the assertion made by Gwen Ngwenya that 90% of claimants preferred cash and explained that if a claim was over urban land, the claimant could only be compensate­d in cash.

Referring to property rights, Cousins said that 60% of blacks have land outside the formal system, but do not have title deeds. This situation is further complicate­d by property sales that were not recorded at the deeds office and, therefore, the new owners do not have title deeds.

Based on an estimation that the bulk of food is produced by 20% of commercial farms, Cousins suggested a provocativ­e policy of redistribu­ting the remaining 80% to small black farmers. This would not put food security at risk. He emphasised that small productive farmers must be supported and that the informal sector must be supported with secure informal land rights.

Constance Mogale of the Land Access Movement of South Africa said that the public was not given a meaningful opportunit­y to participat­e in discussion­s on land reform and referred to one instance where public hearings were announced on Christmas Eve.

She also cited a constituti­onal judgment on land access that emphasised that public participat­ion must be real, and must provide the public with the opportunit­y to be heard where they are capable of influencin­g the decision to be taken.

Mogale also questioned whether customary rights were recognised when property rights were being discussed.

Temba Nolutshung­u, a director of the Free Market Foundation, argued that the government can do more by doing less.

“The state’s surplus land should be redistribu­ted – one family, one plot. Government should move away from scapegoati­ng and focus on what needs to be done.”

He added that land ownership brought about self-economic empowermen­t and gave the owner access to capital, a view that was articulate­d by the Peruvian Economist, Hernando de Soto, in his book The Mystery of Capital.

 ?? Picture: Bloomberg ?? The World Bank said it will start a fund to finance women entreprene­urs, an idea developed with Ivanka Trump, Bloomberg reports.
Picture: Bloomberg The World Bank said it will start a fund to finance women entreprene­urs, an idea developed with Ivanka Trump, Bloomberg reports.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa