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joinafrica features |
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South
Africa - beyond a joke
Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka,
South Africa's recently appointed deputy president, has a sense
of humor, so maybe she was just joking. But it was the political
equivalent of shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theater, and it has
severely shaken confidence in the good sense of the government
she helps to lead.
What she said, at a conference in Johannesburg last week, was
the following: "Land reform in South Africa has been too slow
and too structured. There needs to be a bit of 'oomph.' That's
why we may need the skills of Zimbabwe to help us. On agrarian
and land reform, South Africa should learn some lessons from
Zimbabwe – how to do it fast."
As investors hit the panic button and the people who run South
Africa's economy tore their hair out in despair, Mlambo-Ngcuka's
spokesman, Murphy Morobe, insisted that her remarks were made in
jest during a "lighthearted exchange" during the conference.
Perhaps. But if not, then she was suggesting that South Africa
destroy its agriculture, and subsequently its entire economy, by
emulating Zimbabwe's example.
Zimbabwe was, until the end of the 1990s, a repressive but
modestly prosperous country ruled by an aging leader of the
independence struggle, Robert Mugabe. It was only after voters
rejected his plan to make the country a one-party state (and
thereby assure him the presidency for life) in a 2000 referendum
that he turned to extreme measures in a attempt to rebuild his
popularity. Primary among them – and a sure crowd-pleaser – was
a plan to confiscate land from prosperous white commercial
farmers and "redistribute" it to poor, landless blacks. It was
indefensible that a few thousand white farmers owned most of
Zimbabwe's best farmland. Land reform was long overdue, and if
Mugabe had set about it seriously 20 years before, when he first
took power, it could have been done gradually, legally, and
without any grave damage to Zimbabwe's economy.
But it was bound to be a delicate operation, because the white
farmers grew the cash crops that were the mainstay of Zimbabwe's
economy, and the landless blacks who took over their farms would
initially lack the skills and the capital to fill that role.
Mugabe may not have understood that, and in any case he didn't
care. This was about politics, not the economy, and so he sent
out gangs of armed youth to expel the white farmers and seize
the land. Almost all the white farmers are now out of business –
and so is Zimbabwe.
About half of the seized land went to Mugabe's cronies and
political allies in the ruling party and the military. Some of
the rest did go to poor peasants, but they had neither the tools
nor the skills for large-scale commercial farming, and about
half of Zimbabwe's best farmland now lies fallow. The national
economy has shrunk by 30% since 1999, average income per head is
now lower than in 1980, and half of the population now needs
emergency food aid. Is this what Deputy President Phumzile
Mlambo-Ngcuka has in mind for South Africa?
THE AFRICAN National Congress government has been walking a
tightrope ever since it took control of South Africa 11 years
ago. Most black South Africans still vote for it, but they
expect rapid action to narrow the shocking gap between their
living standards and those of the non-black minorities. The
trouble is that those minorities – whites, Asians, and
mixed-race "Coloureds" who together account for only one-fifth
of the country's 45 million people – still own most of the
businesses, and possess most of the skills, that South Africa
needs if it is to remain a modern industrial economy.
This must change in
time, of course, but change can only be gradual if the economy
is not to be destroyed. The pressure for change is urgent,
however, and only politics can span the gap. The ANC has walked
the political tightrope successfully for a decade, but at least
another decade of the same performance lies ahead of it if South
Africa is to make it into stable prosperity as a multi-racial
democracy. Occasionally the leadership panics and decides a
populist gesture is necessary – and that is the charitable
explanation for Mlambo-Ngcuka's remarks.
Eighty-seven percent of South Africa's farmland was white-owned
when Nelson Mandela took over in 1994; 85% still is today. So
late last month the government announced that it was abandoning
the market-based "willing buyer-willing seller" program of land
redistribution because it is too slow.
White farmers say there are plenty of "willing sellers," but
that they cannot get the government to buy their land. It
doesn't matter who's right. It doesn't even matter all that much
if a fast-track program of taking land from whites and handing
it to blacks destroys South Africa's position as one of only six
net food exporters in the world. Unlike Zimbabwe, South Africa
is a mostly urban country with a fully developed economy, and
agriculture is not a very big part of it.
What does matter is that both South African and foreign
investors continue to see the country as a place where it is the
law, and not mere party politics, that makes the rules. Get that
wrong, and you lose everything. The deputy president really
should mind her mouth.
GWYNNE DYER, London-based independent journalist.
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