Wednesday, 9 December 2015

Which way with the minimum and maximum land holding acreages bill 2015?

 
It is worth noting that the mandate of control of public land is constitutionally vested in the National Land Commission (NLC), with the exception of incidental matters of historical injustices, with private land. Thus, the determination of minimum and maximum acreage, individual or private persons be they natural or juridical may own, is a preserve of the Chief Land Registrar. Historically, control of land was compartmentalized into agricultural land control and land planning control. There was no specific control of the amount of acreage that a private person was entitled to or in the derivative disentitled to. This is purely a new phenomenon that has been necessitated by the phenomena of massive and threatening landlessness, which in the wider sense is also a historical injustice in nature.
In order to further control irresponsible usage and ownership of land, the Government was further empowered through Land Acquisition Act (Cap 295). This among other reasons would be done in the interest of public benefit. Public participation has thus remained a prerequisite in matters related to land ownership though in form, except for this time the law should entrench it in substance to accord to Article 1 of the Constitution of Kenya 2010, all sovereign power belongs to the people, and must be exercised in their name and interest. This legislation is thus intent on curing the mischief occasioned by landlessness and secondly, the senseless holding of productive land without putting it to use while multitudes are deprived of the privilege of putting such big factor of production into strategic economic use.
Taxation Regime

In the United States of America, the control of acreage has been constructively done through the taxation regime. The bigger the land you own the higher the tax and the idler it is the further the tax increases. This has had the effect of discouraging hoarding the Land for speculative purposes. However, the bigger question in the current Bill is the viability of the method of regulation proposed in the legislation; this is the Part IV of the Bill. It does not propose either the minimum size or the maximum size that a person is entitled to. This is absurd since this part is the thrust of both the short and the long title of the Bill.


The foregoing notwithstanding, the Bill has made attempts in PART II at proposing a method and procedure for determining minimum and maximum acreages, only falling shy of placing an exact size that is discernable by the humble grassroots farmers. It has prescribed a litany of methodologies that make the Bill user-unfriendly. Instead of placing acquisition of property subject to satisfaction of an individual’s democratic tax obligation, it proposes creation of abstract mathematical formulae to be commissioned by the Cabinet Secretary as the basis of determination. This is an extreme antithesis as it is neither a constant nor a variable within the market forces of demand and supply that determine price margin for commodity value.

Actually it proposes several bureaucratic nuances that will only serve to move the matter from a simpler comprehension to a more complicated and further sophisticated process. This is done in the names of creation of Land Control Committees in PART III of the Bill. In fact it provides us with the classic example of the phrase the more things change the more they remain the same. It is typical reintroduction of the land Control Boards under the defunct provincial administration system. Is it the novel way of enhancing efficient effective and economic land management process? I guess not, for new wine in an old wine skin does not improve the broth. It will do well to consolidate Cap 318 Laws of Kenya and Cap 302 Laws of Kenya and amalgamate it with the taxation aspects to inject marginal diminishing appetite for land for its own sake.

Land Control Bill
I propose that the title of the Bill should be reviewed and renamed Land Control Bill 2015 with inclusion of strategic and progressive aspects of Agricultural Act (Cap 318) and the Land Control Act Cap (302) which of necessity should take into consideration progressive provisions in the County Government Act as well as the Urban Areas and Cities Act. Consequently, land whose owners may not meet the democratically imposed tax obligation may be reversed to the Land Commission upon prompt compensation. The compensation in this regard need not be adequate but sufficient enough to cover the cost of any improvement placed on the Land.

With this approach the Bill will optimize the return of much misused private land to the government for strategic future planning and use. Ultimately, it is my humble thesis that the Bill should be withdrawn and relooked in light of the progressive strategies that will encourage prudent, efficient, effective and economic use that accord with the democratic principles of the Constitution.

-Mr. Odhiambo is the Law Society
of Kenya (LSK) Deputy Secretary (Parliamentary Affairs & Legislation)

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