I wonder what goes through the mind of South African president Cyril Ramaphosa each morning. I imagine him sipping coffee, planning how he’s going to get the country back to work. He must shake his head, marvelling in revulsion, at the scale of the plundering that his predecessor wreaked on us. The level of their depravity, the stuff of myth and legend.

The president knows all indicators show the country is facing an uphill path to recovery.

In the continent’s most developed country, unemployment is at 27.2 per cent, the highest in the world. The average family, across racial lines, is feeling the hurt of currency falling 20 per cent against the US dollar in the past five months. Filling the family car or taking public transport is painful. The increases in VAT and luxury goods duties strip the joy from family time.

South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Show all 10 1 /10 South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Soweto Township: Local children at Diepkloof hostel, Soweto, South Africa BBC/Rankin Photography South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Picture Shows: Members of a local religious community praying near Yeoville water tower. They can't afford the rent of church space and therefore search out secluded areas to pray, Yeoville, South Africa. BBC/Rankin Photography South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Nontsikelelo 'Lolo' Veleko BBC/Rankin Photography South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Picture Shows: Local Jo burg street fashion, outside the Carlton Centre, The Carlton Centre, South Africa. BBC/Rankin Photography South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Purification by Zioni religious leader, using the blood of a freshly sacrificed chicken, Klipspruit Stream, South Africa. BBC/Rankin Photography South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Zioni purification, Klipspruit Stream, South Africa BBC/Rankin Photography South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Cindy and Nkuli BBC/Nontsikelelo Veleko (Lolo) South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Bongani and some local policemen prepare their own meat for lunch at the local barbeque hut, Bring & Braai, Thokoza Township, South Africa. BBC/Rankin Photography South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Itumeleng Seko Sammy and Mosome photographed by Neo H.G. Ramosa BBC/NEO H.G. RAMOSA /Bobson Studio South Africa in pictures: Rankin's view through a lens Picture Shows: Petunia, Sylvia, Mavis and Elina BY RANKIN in the style of the Bobson Studios, South Africa TX. BBC/ Rankin Photography/Bobson Studio

State-owned entities such as Eskom, drained by state capture and maladministration, reach further into the family purse. The poorest families, 55 per cent of the population, are being punished by a decrease in government spending of some R86bn over the next three years, this also a result of state capture. Parents with children in state schools worry that it might be their child that makes up the three in four who are considered illiterate.

Ramaphosa set himself a target of raising $100bn in foreign and local direct investment to help rebuild the nation. In a short time, he has already secured $30bn worth of commitment from investors. These investments give confidence that South Africa is still business and is looking to grow. This is not unwarranted confidence.

Yet, while Ramaphosa is busy with this, he is watching his back.

He had to cut deals and make peace with those who abandoned Jacob Zuma and supported his run for the presidency. These people are compromised, but wield the political influence he needs to be in leadership. Politics, as they say, makes strange bedfellows.

Land expropriation without compensation (EWC) is the issue that restrains his ambitions. It’s an issue, which no matter how it gets spun, Ramaphosa had to take away from the red-clad populists. They were scoring political points from EWC. In late February, he took ownership. If he hadn’t, the ANC would have been further weakened come the next elections. Nothing balms the pained poor like populist promises.

The causal link between the timing of the new decline in the rand and when he took ownership of EWC cannot escape him. Has EWC stained the allure of “Ramaphoria” or is this just a mild sign of displeasure on the part of investors?

Each time he doesn’t rebuke EWC, investors panic, despite his assurances that EWC can be implemented without damage. His investment envoy, Trevor Manuel, confesses that these assurances don’t always win: “Communicating this [EWC], I think, is a bigger challenge than we thought.”

It’s challenging because there are no models, in the 21st century, that show taking one group’s property away and giving it to another without compensation has not ended in populist armageddons – look to Zimbabwe and Venezuela.

Furthermore, there are no guidelines for the EWC implementation. I think this is deliberate.

There are principles aplenty in the constitution and in legacy ANC documents, but no how-to guides. Without this, there are only past attempts of other countries to be studied and the utterances by those close to him to translate. The powerful ANC chairperson this past week had this to say about how much land people would be allowed to retain: “You shouldn’t own more than 12,000 hectares of land and therefore if you own more, it should be taken without compensation.”

Why should the world trust South Africa when it can’t guarantee the protection of its own citizens’ property rights, whether they be private landowners or traditional leaders? Once you start with land, what next will you expropriate? It’s easy, but lazy, to draw parallels with Zimbabwe.

The 28 million black people living in poverty won’t get wealthier through EWC. The capital and training they need will have taken flight. Banks might end up holding billions in debt on land that has been expropriated, and they won’t be forthcoming with business development or home loans. And the state still has a way to go to fix its weak institutions and root out corruption.

All EWC will do is choke out the country. It’ll shatter the trust the world has in South Africa’s aspirations to be a modernising state.