National Consultative Dialogue Workshop on Land Tenure and Land Policy in Zimbabwe

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National Consultative Dialogue Workshop on Land Tenure and Land Policy in Zimbabwe Hosted by Facilitator: Maxwell Mutema 15 February 2018 Introduction and Background

Invited Professional Bodies Outline Zimbabwe Making it in International News Headlines Basic Facts and Figures on Land and Agriculture in Africa Three Broad Land Tenure System Classifications Six Effects of Property which are Key to Unlock the Economic Value of any Asset Highlights of Zimbabwe Land Tenure Redistribution Land Reform Programme Follow up Actions Most Important Actions Needed to Participate in International Food and Agricultural value Chains Recent Agribusiness Investment Forums where Different African Countries Pitched their Competitive Advantages Zimbabwe Policy Reform Promise to be an Attractive Destination for Investment Samples of the Kind of Projects that Excites Global Agribusiness Investors Format of the Workshop

Invited Professional Bodies Zimbabwe Farmers Union Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers Union Commercial Farmers Union Zimbabwe Agriculture Society

Invited Professional Bodies (continued) Survey Institute of Zimbabwe Zimbabwe Institute of Regional and Urban Planners Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce The Association for Business in Zimbabwe The Institute of Chartered Secretaries and Administrators in Zimbabwe National Employment Council for the Agriculture Industry of Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe Making it in International News Headlines Land at heart of any hope for future in Zimbabwe

Basic Facts and Figures on Land and Agriculture in Africa Africa agricultural productivity is very low-the lowest in the world. Africa is currently spending US$35 billion annually on food/agricultural products imports. Based on available data agricultural production and agribusiness together constitute an average of about 45percent of the gross domestic product (GDP)of Sub Saharan Africa. The agribusiness sector is valued at around US$313 billion. Africa is has 60% of uncultivated land on which agriculture can be expanded. Access to finance is a major challenge to the expansion agribusinesses and productivity

Types of Rights to Land Use rights: rights to grow crops, trees, make permanent improvement, harvest trees and fruits, de-pasture livestock and so on Transfer rights: rights to sell, give, mortgage, lease, rent or bequeath Exclusion rights: rights to exclude others from using or transferring Enforcement rights: refer to the legal, judicial, institutional and administrative provisions to guarantee use, transfer and exclusion rights and to resolve disputes

Three Broad Land Tenure System Classifications (a) A landholding system based upon community values: the traditions of community control for subsistence, security and continuity. A system displaying land resource allocation for kinship or family cohesion and survival, revealing paramount community, clan or family rights, interests and loyalties transcending those of the individual; resource use by the kinship group, descent group or extended family. This is an ancient and autochthonous relationship, more socio-political in nature than merely tenurial or economic consideration; pre-capitalist, pre-socialist, preindustrial, pre nation state;

Three Broad Land Tenure System Classifications.(a) continued essentially rural; evident worldwide but now frequently a residual category in long term decline but still with a wide prevalence in Africa and other developing countries. It also commonly referred to as the customary system. While customary land rights in Africa (communal land or communal tenure in the case of Zimbabwe) may not be insecure as far as local recognition and not being contested are concerned, this is merely security of possession and occupation but not in the true sense of security of tenure to be able to use it as collateral for borrowing without problems.

Three Broad Land Tenure System Classifications..continued (b) A landholding system based upon the principle of private property, accepting private enterprise and the personal profit motive as the guiding dynamic but with checks and balances. General emphasis on individualised, negotiable interests; commercialised and market oriented, but with institutionalised frame-work planning allowing state or local government intervention national, regional or local planning perspectives.

Three Broad Land Tenure System Classifications..continued (c) A landholding system based upon the principle of state ownership of land together with the other factors of production; Land is seen as an exclusively national asset and with the objectives of land use tied closely to national ambitions; to political or economic advantage at a national level. An integral part of the command economy with group incentives and benefits, necessitating a structure of collectivised, nonnegotiable interests with comprehensive, central planning in detail. This was the system of first choice at attainment of independence by most African countries as it was seen as a means of breaking away from the colonial past. It is no longer a favourite of most countries in recent years as it has been found to stifle investment in the agricultural sector.

Distinguishing Features of the Three Broad Land Tenure System Category (b) based upon private property carries within itself a mechanism for continuous adjustment or readjustment: namely the land market. Category (a) although never entirely static, has traditionally resisted any adjustment or readjustment mechanism; whilst category (c) rejects all factor markets in favour of centralised bureaucratic control.

Six Effects of Property which are Key to Unlock the Economic Value of any Asset Property Rights Effect Number 1: Fixing the Economic Potential of Assets Formal property ownership arrangements are the best means to secure individuals interests and to create accountability through provision of all the information, rules, references and the necessary enforcement mechanisms. This allows use of formal property as collateral for loan, as equity that can be exchanged for investment, as an address for collecting debts, rates and taxes; and a locus point for identification of individuals for commercial, judicial or civic purposes.

Six Effects of Property which are Key to Unlock the Economic Value of any Asset..continued Property Rights Effect Number 2: Integrating Dispersed Information into One System In market-based economies most of the assets have been integrated into one formal representation system. This integration demands a great deal of effort to make it happen. In the market based nations where it started it took several decades in the nineteenth century for legislators, judges and politicians to pull together the scattered facts and rules that governed property throughout cities, villages, buildings and farms; and integrated them into one system. This integration has resulted in citizens in market based economies being able to obtain descriptions of the economic and social qualities of any available asset without having to see the asset itself.

Six Effects of Property which are Key to Unlock the Economic Value of any Asset..continued Property Rights Effect Number 3: Making People Accountable The formalisation and integration of property ownership systems shifted the legitimacy of the rights of owners from the context of local community jurisdiction to the impersonal context of law. Releasing owners from restrictive and mostly informal arrangements and bringing them into a more integrated legal system facilitated their accountability.

Six Effects of Property which are Key to Unlock the Economic Value of any Asset..continued Property Rights Effect Number 4: Making Assets Fungible Assets in a formal property system empower their owners with many advantages that can be split up and combined in a way deemed fit to suit any economic circumstance to produce continually higher valued choices whereas owners of such assets in informal arrangements as is in most developing countries remain trapped in the physical world of rigid state control, where their valuable assets are locked permanently in non-fungible forms.

Six Effects of Property which are Key to Unlock the Economic Value of any Asset..continued Property Rights Effect Number 5: Networking People Fungible assets, attaching owners to assets, attaching assets to addresses, putting in place an enforcement mechanism and making information on the history of assets and owners easily accessible, formal assets and property ownership convert citizens into a network of individually identifiable and accountable business agents.

Six Effects of Property which are Key to Unlock the Economic Value of any Asset..continued Property Rights Effect Number 6: Protecting Transactions One critical characteristic that enable the established formal market-based property ownership system to work smoothly as a network is that all property records (title deeds, contracts, securities, etc. that describe the economically significant aspects of assets) are continually updated, tracked and protected over time (throughout time and space). Formal ownership of property and assets are established to protect both the security of ownership and that of transactions of the asset and property. The security of transaction is critical and produces trust in the transactions so that people can more easily make their assets lead a parallel life as capital. Security of transactions allows citizens to move large amounts of assets with very few transactions.

Highlights of Zimbabwe Land Tenure Zimbabwe s Multi Land Tenure Structure in 2016 Freehold tenure, mainly in the LSCFs, the small scale commercial and peri-urban areas where in land is accessed through Market transfer State based leasehold tenure ( with and without option to purchase) which operates mainly in the A2 farms and some SSCFs- where in land is accessed through allocation by the State in the form of land leases Customary tenure which only operate in communal areaswhere in land is accessed through customary tenure and norms Permit tenure provided to landholders on state owned land mainly in A1 and Old Resettlement Areas from the 1980-1985 reforms- where in land is accessed through allocations by the state in the form of permit Unalienated land controlled by the state, devoted largely to gazetted parks and forests, but including some areas managed under concessions negotiated with private entities Source: World Bank, 2016

Distribution by Land Tenure Categories in 1980

Distribution by Land Tenure Categories in 2000

Land Reform Programme The Stages of a Land Reform Programme 1. Land Identification 2. Land Acquisition 3. Compensation 4. Settlement Planning 5. Land Development (Infrastructure) 6. Land Allocation (Redistribution) 7. Land Settlement 8. Post Settlement (Support/Extension) 9. Monitoring and Evaluation

Fast Track Land Reform Programme -Planning -Servicing -Building -Occupation (b) (a)

Follow-up Actions: Determinant of Failure or Success of Redistributive Land Reform Programmes the World Over Success or failure of Land Redistribution Programme such as the Fast Track Land Reform Programme depends on follow up actions or corrective measures. Even in cases where there is no shortage of political will, follow-up actions or corrective measures make the difference.

Redistributive Land Reform Programme versus Follow Up Actions to Success Land redistribution to address past INEQUITIES Follow up actions/ Corrective measures to ensure SUCCESS

Most Important Actions Needed to Participate in International Food and Agricultural value Chains Every country needs to have a land tenure and land policy that is evidence based, with genuine and transparent wide stakeholder consultations and engagement. Land and agricultural policies promulgated by Governments should contribute towards reducing risks in agricultural investments. The only way to participate in the global agricultural and food trade value chain is to meet international standards. Mechanised/Technology Based Farming: without it no chance to participate in international agricultural value chains. Large scale farming form the basis of integrated agricultural production. Both scale and technology require intensive capital investment. Security of land tenure is a key factor in capital investment decision making. The private sector must be the driver of commercial farming, the Government must only be the enabler.

Key Issues to Consider on Land Tenure and Land Policy Land Tenure and Land Administration Productivity, Land Utilisation and Farming Finance Land Use Planning, Natural Resource Management and Conservation Land Compensation Land Disputes and Resolution Land Survey, Registration and Cadastre

Recent Agribusiness Investment Forums where Different African Countries Pitched their Competitive Advantages TRANSFORM: AFRICAN BUSINESS AND INVESTMENT FORUM ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA January 2018

TRANSFORM: AFRICAN BUSINESS AND INVESTMENT FORUM: AGENDA AT GLANCE ROUND TABLE I - Promoting African trade and diversification: A Business imperative. ROUND TABLE II - Increasing power supply through cross-boarder networks. ROUND TABLE III - The business of agriculture: Creating successful agribusiness. ROUND TABLE IV - Advancing public-private partnerships on non-communicable diseases.

German Africa Agribusiness Forum, 22 January 2018, Berlin, Germany

Samples of Individual Country Competitive Advantages Presented at the Forums Rwanda: has registered its land the entire country to stimulate vibrant and functional land markets, with a target of reducing those dependent on agriculture to only 40%. (One commentator said: Politicians should be cheered for the promises they make, but even more important is to cheer them louder for the promises they keep. President Paul Kagame of Rwanda appears to have achieved both. Ethiopia: Integrated Agro-Industrial Parks Kenya: Investors allowed to expatriate profits from their investments as they wish Equatorial Guinea: Private sector driven commercial farming policy aimed at exports to international markets. Mozambique: has 6 million hectares of land available to foreign investors. Zambia: has identified 10 agribusiness project sites of each 100 000 ha available to foreign hectares

Zimbabwe Policy Reform Promise to be an Attractive Destination for Investment

INVESTMENT GUIDELINES AND OPPORTUNITIES IN ZIMBABWE January 2018 GOVERNMENT OF ZIMBABWE

Extract from Investment Guidelines and Opportunities in Zimbabwe-January 2018

A Potential Source of Competitive Advantage for Zimbabwe Our freehold title deed tenure system was once envy of the envy of Africa and the rest of the world. There is need to revisit our current land tenure policy on land intended for commercial farming to restore it.

Samples of the Kind of Projects that Excites Global Agribusiness Investors

Samples of the Kind of Projects that Excites Global Agribusiness Investors..continued

Samples of the Kind of Projects that Excites Global Agribusiness Investors..continued

Samples of the Kind of Projects that Excites Global Agribusiness Investors..continued

Samples of the Kind of Projects that Excites Global Agribusiness Investors..continued

Samples of the Kind of Projects that Excites Global Agribusiness Investors..continued

Samples of the Kind of Projects that Excites Global Agribusiness Investors..continued

Samples of the Kind of Projects that Excites Global Agribusiness Investors..continued

Format of Workshop Presentations Breakaway sessions Expert Speakers Plenary Discussion Adoption of Recommendations, Suggestions and Resolutions

House Rules House Rules Good time keeping Questions at the end Also Note that there is more time for questions and plenary discussions tomorrow. Individual detailed written submissions are most welcome from everyone. THANK YOU!