Business Day

Move on land ‘will run foul of Agoa’

• Trade union Solidarity raises flag over implicatio­ns of expropriat­ion without compensati­on for African nations’ trade deal with US

- Siseko Njobeni Industrial Writer njobenis@businessli­ve.co.za

SA could breach eligibilit­y requiremen­ts of the African Growth and Opportunit­y Act (Agoa) if the country proceeds with plans to implement land appropriat­ion without compensati­on, trade union Solidarity has warned.

In terms of section 104 of the act, the sub-Saharan African countries eligible for Agoa have to commit to protecting private property rights. Agoa, which came into effect in May 2000, provides trade preference­s for quotas and duty-free entry to the US for certain goods.

Solidarity deputy general secretary for metals and engineerin­g Marius Croucamp said the mooted policy changes on land expropriat­ion threatened thousands of jobs and hundreds of companies.

Initially approved for 15 years in 2015, the US government has extended Agoa for another 10 years until September 2025.

ANC head of economic transforma­tion Enoch Godongwana dismissed Croucamp’s allegation­s that expropriat­ion without compensati­on posed a risk to private property rights.

“There is a distinctio­n between expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on and property rights. It is not as if we are saying we are going to expropriat­e every piece of land without compensati­on. We will expropriat­e for specific purposes. For instance, if we need land for housing, we will expropriat­e for that purpose. But we will not expropriat­e in all circumstan­ces,” Godongwana said.

There was a deliberate distortion of the ANC’s intention in order to ignite chaos and panic, he said. An amended section 25 of the constituti­on would spell out conditions under which the government would expropriat­e land without compensati­on.

Solidarity’s warning comes after law firm Herbert Smith Freehills flagged the legal implicatio­ns of the move in July, cautioning that expropriat­ion of foreign-owned property without compensati­on constitute­d violations of internatio­nal law and various treaties to which SA was party.

Peter Leon, Hannah Ambrose and Ernst Müller from the firm said the amendment of the constituti­on would be a disincenti­ve for investment.

“Existing foreign investors, in particular, will need to consider what rights and resources might be available to them under internatio­nal law to mitigate the risk of expropriat­ion without compensati­on,” they said.

Former finance minister Trevor Manuel has spoken of the difficulty in explaining the land policy to investors. Manuel, one of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s special investment envoys, said establishi­ng an understand­ing of the country’s land debate had been tougher than expected.

Speaking at a discussion held by the Obama Foundation in Johannesbu­rg in July, Manuel said: “Communicat­ing this [issue], I think, is a bigger challenge than what we thought.”

Land was a “complex and unresolved matter”, he said.

Azwimphele­li Langalanga, a senior analyst on political economy at Tutwa Consulting Group, said the implementa­tion of land expropriat­ion without compensati­on was unlikely to derail SA’s eligibilit­y for Agoa, adding that the move did not threaten US national interests.

“From a US perspectiv­e, national interests do not necessaril­y include land abroad. But it will elicit concerns if you follow the school of thought that this is the beginning of an attack on property rights in SA.”

Langalanga cited US pushback on the intellectu­al property policy reforms set out earlier in 2018. “They were worried about that and raised those concerns in the context of Agoa. They were also concerned about the amendment of the Private Security Industry Regulation Act.”

Changes to the act included a compulsory 51% local ownership requiremen­t, he said.

THE POLICY CHANGES ON EXPROPRIAT­ION THREATEN THOUSANDS OF JOBS AND HUNDREDS OF COMPANIES

 ?? /Adrian de Kock ?? Lie of the land: Land will only be expropriat­ed for specific purposes — for instance for housing, says the head of the ANC’s economic transforma­tion committee, Enoch Godongwana.
/Adrian de Kock Lie of the land: Land will only be expropriat­ed for specific purposes — for instance for housing, says the head of the ANC’s economic transforma­tion committee, Enoch Godongwana.

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