New land reform proposal is unconstitutional
Minister Gugile Nkwinti's policy proposal entitled "Strengthening the Relative Rights of People Working the Land" is a radical departure from any common sense approach to land reform. It is effectively expropriation by stealth, and is unconstitutional. The DA will accordingly oppose this proposal (see Rapport article).
Indeed, while the DA supports land reform that corrects the wrongs of the past, we cannot support arbitrary expropriation, which will threaten existing jobs, undermine job creation and food security.
As a starting point, this policy forces land owners to relinquish 50% of their property. Government will place funding, equivalent to the value of the forfeited property, into an "Investment and Development Fund" and all labourers shall "assume ownership of the remaining 50%, proportional to their contribution to the development of the land, based on the number of years they had worked on the land."
This proposal will strip capital from rural businesses, and in doing so, will have a devastating effect on rural economies, jobs and food security. These already impoverished communities can simply not afford this.
Share equity schemes are indeed the most successful model of land reform in South Africa. This is in evidence in the Western Cape where 80% of such schemes remain successful agribusinesses - in sharp contrast with the land restitution programme at a national level, where only 10% are deemed successful according to Minister Nkwinti's own statistics.