Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Sum of white farmers’ fears zero in on figure of 12 000ha

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GWEDE Mantashe, the ANC’s grumpy hobbit-like chairperso­n, this week declared the Constituti­on should limit farm sizes to 12 000 hectares, and that white farmers who own more than that should hand over the rest of their land to the state without compensati­on.

It’s not an original proposal: in his State of the Nation Address in February 2013, former president Jacob Zuma announced government plans to impose a land ceiling of 12 000ha on agricultur­al land.

The big difference, of course, was that in 2013 government was willing to compensate farmers on the basis of independen­t land valuations, and now they want to steal it – though not willynilly, but in an orderly, responsibl­e manner so as not to induce panic and harm the economy.

Back then, Zuma’s announceme­nt sparked concern about food security, given that the country has a concentrat­ed agricultur­al structure, with a small core group of farmers responsibl­e for a large chunk of commercial produce.

More interestin­gly, there was some discussion as to how government had arrived at this ceiling of 12 000ha. As researcher Stephen Greenberg noted at the time, this was a vast area – and possibly too high a ceiling rather than too low.

There are no doubt farmers who own more than 12 000ha. Some may not even be white. But it made little sense to settle on this area as a uniform ceiling – or any other, for that matter – as productive land sizes varied according to context.

The Western Cape’s fruit orchards and wine farms occupied relatively little land compared with the sprawling sheep farms of the arid Karoo.

“On the other hand,” Greenberg wrote, “land is hardly even a factor of production for the huge industrial poultry operations, or the enormous cattle feedlots through which more than 75% of commercial beef production passes.”

The largest feedlot in Africa, for example, is near Heidelberg, south of Johannesbu­rg; at 2 330ha, Karan Beef, which accommodat­es 150 000 head of cattle, is about five times the size of the average Gauteng farm, yet less than half the size of the average Northern Cape farm.

Here at the Mahogany Ridge, we suspect little or no science was involved in choosing the ceiling. Luckily, its simplistic form – twelvety, with some zeroes – meant its sudden appearance in the pages of his speech would not demand too much from Zuma, whose challenges in this regard are commonly known.

Further difficulty with sums is, alas, not uncommon in the administra­tion that Accused Number One ceded to his successor, and it is unlikely students attending the staterun “school of governance” will ever face the following poser: “Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba declares the state will collect almost R506 billion in personal income taxes this year. Public Services and Administra­tion Minister Ayanda Dlodlo declares that public sector salaries, growing at rates higher than inflation and which consumed 35% of expenditur­e in 2017, will this year cost the state more than R587bn. Rearrange deckchairs accordingl­y.”

Perhaps there is no need for basic economic principles. There is always money to be found. Somewhere. Not so?

In this regard, it’s worth reminding ourselves that Section 25 of the Constituti­on, that part of the Bill of Rights the ANC wants to change to allow for expropriat­ion without compensati­on, is not confined to land ownership.

As attorney Bulelwa Mabasa, a land claims specialist, told BusinessTe­ch in March, Section 25 guards against “the deprivatio­n of property in a wider sense, such as assets, shares and movable assets and not only land. In fact, it states pointedly… that property is not limited to land”.

Once those protection­s are done away with, there will, in theory, be no stopping Mantashe and his grubby chums from casting a covetous eye around the place and deciding what other stuff and exactly how much of it will the white folk be permitted to own. Or the Indian and coloured folk.

It was French anarchist PierreJose­ph Proudhon who first coined the phrase, La propriété, c’est le vol!, or “Property is theft!” That was in 1840. A quarter century later, Karl Marx would dismiss Proudhon’s assertion, declaring him self-delusional when it came to “true bourgeois property”.

Happily, in the 21st century, the

ANC has worked its way through the philosophi­cal murk, and successful­ly concluded that property is, in fact, only theft when it doesn’t belong to you.

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