NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Long-term planning can get rid of land barons

- Charles Dhewa ● Charles Dhewa is a proactive knowledge broker and management specialist. He writes here in his personal capacity.

THE rise of land barons has become an enduring trend and topic in many agricultur­e-driven African economies over the past few years. In fact, this trend has grown to the extent that in Zimbabwe there are more than five types of land barons. Increase in land barons can largely be attributed to lack of long-term planning around the use of natural resources such as land. In most African countries, national budgets focus on service provision, infrastruc­ture and salaries for civil servants.

No attention is given to investment planning anchored on the four key factors of production:

Capital (finance) — which is emphasised by policymake­rs through budgets.

Land — in its physical form and natural resources — what longterm plans do we have for land which is an unadjustab­le resource?

Human resources — people with their skills, knowledge, passion and aspiration­s.

Entreprene­urship — this is very important as it relates to the establishm­ent of enterprise­s on land. What long-term plans are there on entreprene­urship developmen­t? When colonialis­ts came to Africa, they set up long-term plans specifical­ly around entreprene­urship and industrial developmen­t. Every town was carefully planned with areas designed for residentia­l housing, areas for heavy industries, areas for light industries and so on. Longterm plans also existed for every open space.

The rise of MSMEs, implicatio­ns

In countries like Zimbabwe, the collapse of large-scale industries and emergence of micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs) has created huge demand for land to establish enterprise­s. During the time, most people were employed in big formal industries, there was no serious demand for land to be used as trading space. But following retrenchme­nts and economic down-turns, most people moved into the MSMEs sector, triggering high demand for trading space or workspace. Meanwhile, owners of large-scale industries that have collapsed continue to hold onto land on which their factories sat. Those retrenched have gone to work in spaces originally designed for other uses like recreation­al purposes.

Policymake­rs are yet to see that high demand for land and trading space is giving birth to land barons. As long as demand outweighs availabili­ty and policymake­rs are not generating solutions, the problem of land barons will not end. In agricultur­al markets like Mbare in Harare where 153 market stalls were set up and registered with the municipali­ty when the market was establishe­d more than 50 years ago, increase in demand for trading space has seen each market stall accommodat­ing 5-10 traders renting space from one individual whose name is registered by the municipali­ty. This means 153 registered market stall owners have become space barons for at least 1 500 traders. All this is due to high demand for land to establish enterprise­s not only due to passion by individual­s to start an enterprise, but as a last resort for many people to earn a living.

Infiltrati­on by politics

Political infiltrati­on has worsened within constraine­d ecosystems where demand for land and space is rising. With local authoritie­s losing their policies and power, political power has taken over the governance and management of local authoritie­s to the extent that politician­s are now the governors and owners of urban land and markets. Traders are obliged to follow what political leaders are saying, but these local political leaders have become land barons who charge an extra fee on traders who are already paying rentals to local authoritie­s.

Another related issue on the demand side is infrastruc­ture developmen­t for the fast-growing young generation. The issue is now stretching from production zones or rural areas to towns due to lack of a clear national plan and guidance on land use. With increasing urbanisati­on, some previously rural business centers like Domboshava near Harare are rapidly urbanising, but the original plans for Domboshava before it became a residentia­l area have remained unknown.

Traditiona­l leaders becoming land barons

Traditiona­l leaders have become another version of land barons. Abusing their roles as custodians of traditiona­l land, they are now loosening traditiona­l laws and values which previously stipulated that they should not sell communal land. They are now facilitati­ng and authorisin­g sale of land that was not designed for residentia­l purposes. Traditiona­lly, these leaders would only allow people to rent land in communal areas, but not sell. Now the village heads are willingly partitioni­ng land and giving it to new people from anywhere. Some of the land being partitione­d was traditiona­lly set aside for livestock pastures and rituals like rainmaking ceremonies.

While urbanisati­on is now starting from rural areas, developing residentia­l areas is taken as a national issue, yet residentia­l developmen­t is not really an economic driver. Building houses on land meant for agricultur­e does not contribute to growth of domestic product. As financial institutio­ns such as banks and pension funds evolve into another brand of land barons, urban and peri-urban land that was meant for food production is being converted into residentia­l areas. Converting such areas as Nyabira near Harare, with high potential for food production into brick and wall investment­s has several consequenc­es.

What is the cost benefit analysis of converting an unexpandab­le resource like land into residentia­l accommodat­ion at the expense of food production? Some countries have long-term plans which see them demolishin­g existing structures and building flats. In countries like Zimbabwe, land for agricultur­e is being taken up by real estate yet the human population is naturally increasing. Eventually there will be more people with houses, but no food. The developmen­t pathway for houses is being pushed by the demand for accommodat­ion, not demand for houses. That is why property owners are turning their houses into businesses through rentals.

By taking advantage of the demand for accommodat­ion and business space, property owners have also become land barons. Shopping malls that are mushroomin­g in big cities like Harare are for consumable­s and have nothing to do with industrial developmen­t which is more important for socioecono­mic developmen­t. The original central business district is now being turned into a cash cow by property owners who are demolishin­g original buildings into malls in response to demand for trading space. It implies rentals-driven land barons are becoming another form of land baronship as demand for residentia­l and trading pushes up prices. This is an undefined form of corruption because rules that used to gazette rental charges that can be charged in a certain area are ignored. Property owners are doing what they want with their properties, which is why you can even see a surgery in an area where it would not be set up if rules and by-laws were really followed.

Land barons by leasing

Leasing of agricultur­al land has become another serious version of land baronship. If all land belongs to the State as is the case in Zimbabwe, what is the purpose of giving an individual 5 000 hectares when that individual can only use less than 100 hectares? In rural Africa, a household with six members can survive on less than 20 hectares and is able to send children to school as well as meet other needs. Why should individual­s benefit from leasing land that belongs to the State? It is wrong for a few people to benefit by earning a living from national assets, while the rest wallow in poverty.

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