Basa wants to ensure any change to the constitution does not make investors, or potential investors, ‘jittery’
The heated debate over land reform in the past few months has not discouraged banks from lending to the agriculture sector.
The Banking Association of SA’s (Basa’s) unaudited figures of the big
four banks show that loans to commercial farmers have increased 11.2%
to R148bn at the end of June, from R133bn in December 2017.
Banks have about R1.6-trillion in property loans.
Basa said this was “hard evidence” that banks are committed to
sustainable land reform and are confident that SA can find practical
solutions to the challenges of restitution, redistribution and security
of tenure.
Basa MD Cas Coovadia said that while it was essential for SA to deal
with land reform, a critical issue was attracting investment and
stimulating growth to tackle the issues of poverty as well as
unemployment.
It had to be determined whether a change in the constitution would promote growth and investment or inhibit it, Coovadia said.
“The last thing we need … is rhetoric or legislation that gets
investors or potential investors jittery and stops us from moving from
the very pedestrian growth that we have,” he said.
The disparity of land ownership due to apartheid could be dealt with
through public-private partnerships with the government and the
agribusiness sector, Coovadia said.
While Basa did not think the constitution had to be changed to ensure
land reform, any change should be done in a way that does not undermine
property rights.
“If property rights are undermined, that is a critical pillar for
investment and that would measure negatively to draw investment,” he
said.
Bungling the execution of expropriation without compensation could
create uncertainty in SA for a number of years, said GM for human
settlements in the market conduct division Pierre Venter.
Venter pointed out that the agriculture sector was quite a small part of the assets of the commercial lenders.
But a mass default could create a contagion risk for the banks sector.
“You’re not suddenly going to find all agricultural land expropriated
at the same time, so it would be staggered over a long period,” Venter
said.
Submissions that Basa would make to parliament next week over whether
the constitution should be changed to explicitly allow for the
expropriation of land without compensation included ones about a land
summit and the creation of an ombudsman for land reform.
Coovadia said that the land summit to review the land-reform
programme would host the critical interested parties and give them an
opportunity to discuss whether compromises should be made.
The creation of an ombudsman would also create a level playing field for people seeking land restitution, he said.
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