Among the greatest obstacles to growth is
the severe inequality between black and white South Africans. For the
South African economy to reach its full potential, it is therefore
necessary to significantly narrow gaps in income, skills, assets and
opportunities.
One of the areas where this disparity is most devastating is in the
ownership and access to land. As the World Bank has observed, “SA’s
historical, highly skewed distribution of land and productive assets is a
source of inequality and social fragility.”
It argues that, after skills, current distribution of land is the
second-biggest constraint to poverty reduction and shared prosperity. In
order for SA to secure the future, and to ensure equitable and just
human development opportunities as envisioned by our first democratic
president, Nelson Mandela, reform of patterns of land ownership in SA is
a critical issue.
That is why the government has embarked on a process of accelerated
land reform and why South Africans are currently engaged in an intense
debate over the prospect of expropriation of land without compensation
as one among several measures to achieve this reform. Unfortunately,
several commentators have confined their engagement on this matter to
soundbites and not to the substance.
The “land question” goes back more than a century to the 1913 Natives
Land Act, which provided legislative form to a process of dispossession
that had been under way since colonial times. It confined the country’s
African population to slightly more than 10 per cent of the land,
reserving the rest for the white minority. These laws alienated the
majority of our citizens from their places of birth and burial, stripped
them of their assets and deprived them of their livelihoods.
Even now, the dispossession of land continues to determine the
prospects of millions of South Africans, and it holds back the country’s
economic development. By restricting the ownership of land to a small
minority, the apartheid regime ensured that one of the country’s most
valuable economic resources would be severely underutilised.
During this year the department of rural development and land reform
released results of a land audit to establish land ownership patterns.
Among other insights forthcoming from the land audit, it emerged that:
- Individuals, companies and trusts own 90 per cent of land in SA, and the state 10 per cent
- Of this 90%, individuals own 39%, trusts 31%, companies 25% and community-based organisations 4%, with co-ownership at 1%.
- In terms of farms and agricultural holdings, 97% of the total agricultural holdings are owned by 7% of landowners
- Agricultural land ownership by race: 72% of farms and agricultural
holdings are owned by whites, 15% by coloured citizens, 5% by Indians,
and 4% by Africans
For decades, the country’s assets — its land, its minerals, its human
resources, its enterprises — have been owned, controlled and managed in
a way that has prevented the extraction of their full value. Our
intention is to unlock the economic potential of land. Without the
recognition of the property rights of all our people, we will not
overcome inequality, and without giving the poor the means to
productively farm the land, we will not defeat poverty.
In promoting accelerated land reform, the ruling ANC, recently
resolved to propose a constitutional amendment that would make explicit
the conditions under which land could justifiably be expropriated
without compensation. While the current clause in the constitution
dealing with property rights does not necessarily prohibit such a
measure, the ANC’s view is that an amendment would provide certainty and
clarity.
The proposed amendment would need to reinforce the fundamental
principles of the property clause, which, among other things, prohibits
the arbitrary deprivation of property and holds that expropriation is
possible in the public interest subject to just and equitable
compensation. It also says that no provision can impede the process of
land reform to redress the results of past racial discrimination.
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