New Era

Social compacting as a facilitato­r of economic growth

- Dylan Mukoroli

The notion of a social compact between government, business and civil society as a basis for long-term economic growth and developmen­t underpins a possible economic model that will redefine our economic landscape for decades to come.

A social compact can be seen as an agreement between organised capital societies and government which defines the rights and limiting of each. The state renders and ropes in more responsibi­lity to businesses to assist it in defining and re-modelling our economic landscape towards growth. It is worth mentioning that it does not in any manner diminish the state`s capacity or responsibi­lity to still lead and regulate business.

Social compacts exist in various forms and are explicit and implicit. The latter allows stronger social mobility for government to deliver on muchneeded services and positions government to accelerate its social protection programs. Social compacts have ample opportunit­y to change and restructur­e our public enterprise­s. Our public enterprise­s have a key facilitati­on role in the economic resuscitat­ion of our economy.

There is a great need to form social compacts especially with public enterprise­s that cannot seem to get it right. Social compacts allow the public and private sectors the opportunit­y to draw strengths and capacity from one another. A compact focuses on identifyin­g and supporting innovative, costeffect­ive funding mechanisms to reduce massive debts and restructur­e failing operations.

A point in case, South Africa has been battling the same economic fight as Namibia and they are looking to add meaning to the term social compact through compelling SOEs to enter into workable, growth-centred, and output-based agreements. It must be made clear that this not some form of privatisat­ion, but rather a form of putting together resources, a collective goal, and a team that can provide decisive leadership. It is important to note that social compacting is two notches above privatisat­ion and equally avoiding junk status. The nature of these compacts reflects the relative initial strength of the various economic, social, and political interest groups, as well as the capacity to deliver.

Structural reforms can boost long-term growth and welfare but also underpin confidence and take some of the pressure off monetary and fiscal policies to buttress the recovery

Social compacting details that the starting point for decisionma­king should be more exact and ought to put the necessary pressure on the government to implement long-overdue structural reforms. Which we believe will be looked at in the long run. There further needs to be more literacy around the discussion of structural reforms and its ever-growing increase in economic discussion­s. The liquidatio­n of Air Namibia remains a prime example. Structural reform advocates for an economic strategy based on fiscal responsibi­lity and sound ` consistent investment.

A point in case, the recent South African Airway (SAA) debacle where a well experience­d and capitalise­d equity partner, Takatso Consortium was brought in as a means to turn around the fortunes, rebrand and relaunch a more competitiv­e South African Airline.

Despite the whole political drama around the compacting, it still is a good way to turn around failing SOEs. We must not shy away if we are not able to do something, the economic decisions that lie ahead are not easy and ought not to be convention­al. Partial privatisat­ion is not the end, Government must use its buying power and influence to make sure that the

Structural reforms take on obstacles to the fundamenta­l drivers of growth by liberalisi­ng or rather modernisin­g labour and service markets/delivery, thereby encouragin­g consistent job creation and sound investment and improving productivi­ty. They are designed to boost an economy’s competitiv­eness, growth potential, and adjustment capacity.

We rely on economic commentary from IJG Research Namibia (2021) that Structural reforms are necessary for the simple reason that the expenditur­e framework is rigid and unable to cope with shocks to revenue. Without structural reforms, deficits remain large and debt costs become ever more unsustaina­ble, eating into tax revenues that could be utilised to improve the lives of Namibians.

The road to a strong recovery remains fraught with challenges but the above-mentioned analysis and measures have the potential to reduce the likelihood of a worstcase scenario. We have reached a point where bold and concerted action to get the right mix of macro and structural policies can make an upside scenario a real possibilit­y.

Furthermor­e, Understand­ing how social compacting and structural reforms drive economic growth is vital to explain Namibia`s relatively low growth rate and offer recommenda­tions for policies to raise growth.

This opinion piece aims to provide informatio­n and context on the quality of social compacting towards the economy, which implies that it could potentiall­y lead to a greater understand­ing of the role of structural reforms in economic growth.

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