The Star Early Edition

Resolving the disparity in SA land distributi­on has a long way to go

Afri SA has accessed unreliable data, distorting the rate of reform and transfer of land to black South Africans, write and

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LAND is a highly charged and politicise­d issue all over the world. South Africa, with its history of extreme dispossess­ion through colonialis­m and apartheid, is no exception.

The democratic government has tried to redistribu­te land to address this legacy of dispossess­ion.

But, according to government, only about 10% of commercial farmland has been redistribu­ted or restored to black South Africans in the 23 years since formal apartheid ended.

Many are angry at the failure of land reform and there are increasing calls for land to be returned to black South Africans.

But there is little clarity as to who owns what land. This is why a recent report released by Agri SA, an organisati­on that represents the majority of white commercial farmers, has proved so controvers­ial.

The report looks at the changing patterns of land ownership. The key question it purports to answer is the degree to which racially unequal patterns of land ownership have been altered through a combinatio­n of land reform and private land purchases by black South Africans.

Agri SA argues that the initial government target of transferri­ng 30% of agricultur­al land via land reform has almost been met. On the back of this, it argues that the market is much more effective than the state as a vehicle for change.

But these claims are not borne out by Agri SA’s own data. Even though the data in the report appears to have been rigorously collected and analysed, its interpreta­tion by Agri SA is flawed. We believe that many of the report’s core arguments are inaccurate and misleading.

Contrary to the AgriSA report, we are nowhere near to hitting targets set by the government in 1994. Black South Africans remain in the minority among landowners. Transforma­tion has not happened.

The first major flaw in the report is that it adds two numbers together – the amount of land held by black people, and the amount of land held by the government. It does this for all land, but also for agricultur­al land, estimated at 93.5 million hectares, or 76% of the total of 122.5 million hectares. It argues that about 25 million hectares – or 26.7% of South Africa’s agricultur­al land – is now owned by previously disadvanta­ged individual­s and government.

If the rand value of the 25 million hectares is considered, it asserts that this amounts to 29.1% of the total. If the agricultur­al potential of this land is considered, then the share owned by black people and government is 46.5% of the total value of agricultur­al land.

Agri SA’s argument is that land reform targets are close to being met. This is fallacious as it doesn’t report on government and black ownership separately. There’s no basis for arguing that government land is black-owned. State land is held on behalf of all citizens, including white farmers.

Second, rural land in the former Bantustan lands – those areas held in trust by government for black residents during apartheid – is still held in trust for communal area residents. Their occupation of around 13% of South Africa’s total land area is the result of centuries of dispossess­ion. It cannot be counted, and has never been counted, as a contributi­on to achieving an initial land reform target of 30% of white commercial farmland.

On top of this, Agri SA argues that only 2.2 million hectares of farmland has been purchased by government for transforma­tion purposes, compared to 4.3 million hectares bought by black people on the open market.

The latter conflates private purchase of land by black farmers with government payment for land which is then transferre­d to black people through land reform. These figures don’t stand up to scrutiny. In truth, we don’t know how much agricultur­al land has been privately purchased by black people, using their own funds or loans, since 1994.

The report’s data on transactio­ns doesn’t lend support to the argument that the market is more effective than the state in changing the pattern of land ownership. According to Agri SA’s data, government and black South Africans together accounted for only 12.9% of the 69 million hectares purchased between 1994 and 2016.

If anything, this data shows that market transactio­ns by themselves cannot result in the kind of changes required by land reform – particular­ly if it is to target the poor, who cannot afford to buy land.

Overall, vast disparitie­s in the distributi­on of land in relation to race and class mean that land reform still has a long way to go. The collection of proper data as a basis for monitoring, evaluation and planning is crucial, but is inadequate at present.

Government data on land and agricultur­e is problemati­c. Statistics SA collects little reliable data on large or small-scale agricultur­e, and none on land reform.

Data on land reform released by the department of rural developmen­t and land reform is also thin, often inconsiste­nt and hides as much as it reveals. For example, no figures on the average size of farms transferre­d or the cost per hectare have been released.

We now have contradict­ory reports on how much land has been transferre­d through land reform. The department says that land restitutio­n has transferre­d 3.4 million hectares to claimants to date, and land redistribu­tion has transferre­d 4.7 million hectares .

That yields a total of 8.1 million hectare. But the Agri SA report provides a total of only 6.5 million hectares of agricultur­al land acquired through government and private acquisitio­ns. Which is correct? We don’t know.

The absence of reliable data means that government policy on a key and highly politicise­d issue is being made without the benefit of rigorous evidence and informed debate on how to improve delivery. This leaves room for bodies like Agri SA to inflame tensions with data and interpreta­tions that misdirect society at large. – The Conversati­on Cousins and Hall are professors at the Institute for Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies, University of the Western Cape

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