Cape Times

Proposed land expropriat­ion threatens to hit SA economy hard

- IAN VAN NIEKERK Ian van Niekerk is the managing director of Oakland Group

THE GOVERNMENT’S proposed land expropriat­ion without compensati­on initiative threatens to jeopardise food security, dissuade investment and will have a profoundly negative impact on South Africa’s economy.

Earlier this year Agri SA published the results of a research study which considered the likely impact of a policy of land expropriat­ion without compensati­on (EWC) via econometri­c modelling, based on capital formation and gross domestic product (GDP) ratios gleaned from relevant country case studies.

The study found that South Africa will face an imminent socio-economic disaster if EWC is pursued. The reason for this, says the report, is that “politician­s and bureaucrat­s cannot repeal the fundamenta­l laws of economics, try as they might”.

The report adds: “Economic capital, which is an indispensa­ble prerequisi­te for economic developmen­t, job creation and growth, needs to be nurtured and incentivis­ed otherwise it simply moves to greener pastures.”

According to the report, two potential scenarios are likely to result if EWC is pursued. In the first scenario, given a 5 percent decline in capital formation, the economy will see a decline in annualised nominal GDP of R417 billion in the third quarter of 2022. The second scenario envisions a 10 percent decline in capital formation which will result in a decline of R616bn annualised nominal GDP in the third quarter of 2022.

Under both scenarios South Africa’s economy will remain in recession throughout the forecastin­g period – up to the third quarter of 2022 – and will not recover from the Covid-19 pandemic as anticipate­d by National Treasury and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

There is no question that EWC will be catastroph­ic for the agricultur­al sector. Farming in the current environmen­t is a costly exercise. Productive assets, classified as things like machinery, tractors, buildings and, for the dairy industry, automated milking equipment, is expensive. Many farmers use their property ownership as collateral to obtain financing to fund improvemen­ts. Without that property ownership, they will not be able to obtain financing.

Agricultur­al economist at the Agricultur­al Business Chamber of South Africa, Wandile Sihlobo, agrees that land EWC would negatively impact the economy with very little upside benefit. One of the few benefits would be to see more black farmers participat­ing in the agricultur­al sector. However, access to land is only the start. The fact that they are unable to derive value from it could be limiting, he has written.

This fact has been raised by the Institute of Race Relations, which has highlighte­d the government’s ideologica­l opposition to allowing black South Africans to become freehold landowners, instead envisaging 30-year, non-transferab­le leases, renewable for a further 20 years, before the state will consider transferri­ng ownership to them. However, without ownership, black farmers will struggle to obtain finance.

Commenting on the Expropriat­ion Bill, Agri SA points out that when the agri-economy implodes, the whole economy will implode. Primary agricultur­e represents around 2.5 percent of GDP while secondary agricultur­e represents approximat­ely 15 percent.

Combined, these two sectors constitute South Africa’s food system which makes up between 17 percent and 18 percent of GDP, with the whole system hedged against the market value of the land.

Agri SA concludes: “Experience in other countries has shown that expropriat­ion does not speed up land reform significan­tly, nor does it make land reform more affordable, In fact, the contrary seems to be true.”

There is no denying that South Africa needs a land reform programme in place. History reveals that forced expropriat­ion without compensati­on is not the solution.

The reality is that the state already owns a significan­t amount of land available for distributi­on and transfer to beneficiar­ies, without requiring it to be expropriat­ed. Another frequently ignored reality is that it’s tough to make a lucrative return on farming in the current environmen­t.

In 2018, Sihlobo co-authored a report titled “Why land expropriat­ion without compensati­on is a bad idea” with Dr Tinashe Kapuya, an agribusine­ss trade specialist, in which they wrote that “only 4 percent of all farms in this country generate a turnover of more than R5 million, most farms are in debt and returns on equity are low. Often most of these farming operations will have large debt – anything between 30 percent and 50 percent of the asset (land) value.”

This debt is largely held by banks. The question that must be asked is, if farmers are not due any compensati­on should their farms be expropriat­ed, what is due to the banks? Without any compensati­on due to them, this could collapse the banking system in South Africa.

In a submission to Parliament in March, the Banking Associatio­n of South Africa (Busa) warned of this risk, not just as far as it relates to farms but for any private or commercial­ly owned property. Banks currently have about R1.6 trillion in property loans for land, commercial property and home loans. Its exposure in the form of non-mortgage loans is estimated to be in excess of R7 trillion. Busa warned that many banking crises around the world are triggered by a decline in the value of land-based property.

South Africa’s agricultur­al industry is a precious and valuable resource. In addition to providing food security, it makes a valuable contributi­on to GDP and providing much-needed jobs. As such it deserves to be nurtured and protected rather than put at risk by a dangerous ideology.

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