The Mercury

RIGHT OF REPLY

- Siyabonga Madlala

ARESPONSE to Rex Talmage’s article in Business Report on Tuesday, “Low tariff on sugar imports a big threat”. It is true that the long droughts, health promotion levy (sugar tax) and inadequate tariff protection are threats to the industry. However, I would contend that the biggest threat facing the domestic sugar industry is the lack of transforma­tion.

The Ministry of Trade and Industry is the custodian of transforma­tion in South Africa, having introduced the Codes of Good Practice in 2004 and a number of sector charters. Interestin­gly, the sugar industry as a sector is accountabl­e to the Department of Trade and Industry.

It is only since the birth of Safda (the South African Farmers Developmen­t Associatio­n), which the industry has only officially recognised a few months ago, that the sugar industry has been seriously looking at the matter of transforma­tion.

This is not just the window dressing of appointing a few black faces to boards and senior management level – but real transforma­tion as evidenced through the seven pillars of ownership, management control, employment equity, skills developmen­t, preferenti­al procuremen­t, enterprise and supplier developmen­t as well as socio-economic developmen­t.

In fact, the only reason that Safda exists is because the voices of the black sugar-cane farmer in general and the African farmer in particular were not heard. We have been fighting for recognitio­n of our people as independen­t voices in the sugar industry for a number of years.

It is only through the interventi­on of the parliament­ary portfolio committee on trade and industry that the industry has been dragged kicking and screaming into ensuring that true transforma­tion is realised. That battle continues.

Talmage, therefore, takes liberties with the truth in claiming that Cane Growers “represents almost 24 000 independen­t sugar cane farmers” and “more than half of all emerging small-scale black farmers”.

Struggling

South Africa does not currently have 24 000 sugar-cane farmers and Cane Growers certainly does not represent more than half of all emerging small-scale black farmers.

Farmers are indeed struggling. An overwhelmi­ng majority of farmers – 90 percent – produce sugar cane on tiny pieces of land (sometimes as little as 0.5 hectares). But, they only provide about 10 percent of the local sugar-cane crop. This is not a new challenge – and has certainly not been brought about by drought, taxes or tariffs.

Cane Growers has had almost a century to focus on improving the lives of millions of black small-scale and land reform sugar-cane farmers and contribute to rural economies. However, their focus has obstinatel­y remained on servicing less than 10 percent of white commercial farmers who deliver 90 percent of South Africa’s sugar-cane crop.

It is, therefore, disingenuo­us and a blatant lie to talk about investment in grower developmen­t. The economic definition of an investment is “doing something today to create wealth in future”.

Talmage contends that Cane Growers has invested millions of rand exclusivel­y in black small-scale farmers – yet these are the very same farmers who have received zero income for the 2017-18 production season. Some are even highly indebted with no money to even feed their families. Visit any one of our rural sugar-cane-growing communitie­s in either KwaZulu-Natal or Mpumalanga and it is clearly visible that no such wealth has been created for the black farmer.

In fact, there has been a marked decline in the number of black small-scale sugar-cane farmers in South Africa – from about 50 000 in 2010 to about 18 000 today (contrary to the bloated figure that Talmage contends).

Why would there be such a marked decline in the numbers if these so-called investment­s were having the desired effect of wealth creation?

So, on behalf of the thousands of black small-scale and land reform sugar-cane farmers who call Safda home, I stand up to say no, not in my name. The propaganda and fake news penned by Talmage is not in my name. The preservati­on of the status quo is not in my name – and the alleged millions that have been “invested” in killing off black sugar-cane farmers is certainly not in my name!

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