Obstacles To The Process

Despite the putting in place of good laws, there is a lack of will from most stakeholders to put words into action.


The South African Constitution mandates land reform through restitution, redistribution, and tenure reform. Since 1994, only 3.2 million hectares of land have been transferred to Black owners through land restitution, while 5.8 million hectares have been redistributed, representing less than 10 percent of South Africa's commercial farmland. Despite the signing into law of the Expropriation Act of 2024, which allows for land seizure under certain conditions, such as unused land, abandoned, or poses a risk to the public, not much has been done to remedy the situation. Up to date, while the South African government frames it as a necessary tool for land reform in a country still grappling with Apartheid’s legacy, the picture on the field is bleak do to numerous hurdles.
Bureaucratic delays, patronage and political influence, and opportunism among beneficiaries and landowners are among the challenges that have hindered South Africa’s land reform programme progress. The centralized and bureaucratic nature of identifying and managing new farmers to determine which ones would ultimately be evicted and which ones would be given opportunities to buy and own the land further slows the rate of giving out title deeds to new farmers. Without ownership titles, free land markets would not emerge quickly enough to present the more obvious economic benefits. While trying to achieve ...

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