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Zille farm worker proposal praised

Jul 30, 2010 1:18 PM | By Sapa

Agriculture Minister Tina Joemat-Pettersson congratulated Western Cape Premier Helen Zille on Friday for suggesting a 50/50 equity share scheme between farmers and their workers.


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Helen Zille
Helen Zille
quote If Premier Zille is saying 50/50, then it is radical and she deserves a round of applause for that. quote

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"If Premier Zille is saying 50/50, then it is radical and she deserves a round of applause for that," Joemat-Pettersson said at the start of a two-day farm workers summit in Somerset West outside of Cape Town.

"But she must bring her constituency to the table and then we'll talk about it," the minister said to applause from farm workers and delegates.

Zille said in her speech equity share schemes were "desirable" because they were a model of genuine broad-based black economic empowerment.

"There's also evidence from government research that 50/50 equity share schemes are the most productive land reform model by far," Zille said.

"When equity share schemes work they are productive, sustainable and offer real empowerment.

"Equity share schemes had been used, but had to come to a halt due to problems with monitoring grants and budget constraints.

"Lets work quickly to resolve problems with equity share schemes so that farm workers who are the bedrock of sustainable food production can start reaping the benefits," Zille said.

President Jacob Zuma told the conference much work still had to be done to ensure that farm workers were treated humanely by farmers.

"It is a fact that working conditions for many farm workers still remain far from ideal," Zuma said.

"Many have no insurance, including UIF, which means their futures are not secure."

Zuma said the conference would go a long way towards finding solutions for problems affecting farm workers.

"It is clear we need to do things differently in this sector, we can no longer delay the solutions," he said.


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Comments

Jul 30 2010 01:22:13 PM
lostboy
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Great idea! But the ANC cadres want ALL or nothing, by which I mean they actually just want ALL, regradless of actual farming expertise! Watch the 'satanic racist Zille' remarks pour in! ANC dreks are predictable that way!
Jul 30 2010 01:29:29 PM
lamb chop
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Lost boy they will use the old tired toilet story as they have nothing else. Pathetic childish bunch.
Jul 30 2010 01:30:33 PM
nzinzi
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Go Zille. Now parastatals' top executives should share a % of their fat salaries with the lowest earners. This will plough back the taxpayer's money where its needed most.
Jul 30 2010 01:32:33 PM
zimasa77
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Zille will loose white votes on this one........
She is getting desperate to get in power.
Jul 30 2010 01:39:16 PM
Kunta_Kinte
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"Many have no insurance, including UIF, which means their futures are not secure."

Tell that to your wife, you know the one whose family gave your a black goat.

Madam's constituency should really buy into this idea. The benefits for the country as a whole outweigh the losses to the original owners, however it mustn't be forced on them. It must be done in good faith.
Jul 30 2010 01:40:06 PM
QualityOfLife
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No zimaza77

Lots of us will support this because we know it will be managed correctly. And who cares if she looses a few right wing white votes, much more to be gained.
Jul 30 2010 01:44:12 PM
Pimp called Siyabangena
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Wow, Zille a champion for BBBEE, I guess the Ipsos Markinor findings are causing panic in the DA camp and they are desperate for the Black (African) vote.
Jul 30 2010 01:52:20 PM
Biko Lives
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How can you go 50/50 to a deal with someone who stole from you? Once we are finished with the mines the agricultural sector should be on the agenda for nationalisation!
Jul 30 2010 01:54:56 PM
White Mamba
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There are a lot of issues to address to make this work.

Factors hindering the application:

investment procedures are difficult to understand for people with only basic schooling

farm owners feel *threatened* by sharing decision making

high investments are required from shareholders and this will be a disincentive

economic outlook in some enterprises is currently bleak

owners may feel limited in their options to mechanise and reduce the labour force.

Good labour relations based on trust and goodwill are a basic ingredient to set off any such process.

I support this initiative if it can be successfully implemented. It can only *stablize* one of the largest employment industries in the country.

Jul 30 2010 01:59:03 PM
Distressed
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Surely 50% is not enough! Don't forget how these guys keep multiplying with the help of Government grants!