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Most South African farmers are black: why Trump got it so wrong
The Star
|June 02, 2025
WHEN world leaders engage, the assumption is always that they engage on issues based on verified facts, which their administrative staff are supposed to prepare. Under this assumption, we thought the meeting at the White House on 21 May between South Africa's president, Cyril Ramaphosa, and US president Donald Trump would follow this pattern.
 Disappointingly, the televised meeting was horrifying to watch as it was based on misrepresenting the reality of life in South Africa.
Issues of agriculture, farming and land (and rural crime) were central to the discussions. What is clear to us as agricultural economists is that the skewed views expressed by Trump about these issues originate in South Africa. This includes Trump’s statement: “But Blacks are not farmers.”
In our work as agricultural economists, we have, in many pieces and books (our latest titled The Uncomfortable Truth about South Africa’s Agriculture), tried to present South Africans with the real facts about the political economy policy reforms and structural dimensions of South African agriculture.
Writing on these matters was necessary given that official data - agricultural census 2017, as well as the official land audit of 2017 - all provide an incomplete picture of the real state and structure of South African agriculture. The reason is that the agricultural census, which is supposed to provide a comprehensive and inclusive assessment of the size and structure of the primary agricultural sector, and the land audit, which was supposed to record the ownership of all land in South Africa, are incomplete in their coverage.
The incomplete and inaccurate official data provides fertile ground for radical statements by the left and the right - and novices on social media. This is why South Africa has to deal with falsehoods coming from the US. These include Trump’ statement that black people are not farmers in South Africa.
South Africa is to blame for providing inaccurate data to feed these false narratives.
This story is from the June 02, 2025 edition of The Star.
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