Business Day

Blame political elite for poverty and lack of economic freedom

- Martin van Staden Van Staden is a legal researcher at the Free Market Foundation.

There has been much talk recently about the “inadequacy” of SA’s 1994 political transition, which led to the 1996 Constituti­on. It brought about political freedom, they say, but not economic freedom, as the majority of South Africans remain poor.

It is important to engage with this narrative from an economic and a jurisprude­ntial viewpoint.

Prior to 1993 SA was governed under a system of parliament­ary sovereignt­y. This meant, insofar as humanly possible, parliament could do as it pleased. There was no rule of law, but only the rule of 178 men in the House of Assembly. This system gave rise to apartheid.

It had nothing to do with SA’s Roman-Dutch legal tradition, which recognises the inherent rights of all people — black and white — to be free and to own property.

Apartheid denied both freedom and property rights to the majority, and could do so because parliament was sovereign. This is directly relevant to the political economy SA had: one of racial socialism. The apartheid government owned masses of the economy through stateowned enterprise­s, and indirectly through interventi­onist regulation­s.

The government didn’t “own” white people’s houses directly — as it did with blacks, a situation that continues to this day — but legislatio­n such as the Group Areas Act prohibited them from selling their houses to whomever they wanted.

Statutes such as the Native Land Act prohibited white farmers from trading in land with black people, something that had happened frequently in the late 19th century.

Two aspects thus characteri­sed apartheid economics: an interventi­onist state and very insecure property rights.

What changed when the interim constituti­on was enacted, and later the 1996 Constituti­on? Theoretica­lly, the rule of man was at an end. Section 1(c) of the Constituti­on provides that SA is founded upon the supremacy of the Constituti­on and the rule of law. Parliament may no longer do as it pleases, and is constraine­d by the law.

Unfortunat­ely, the current political class is not keen on this. The rule of law, and the freedom and prosperity of the people, have often come in second place to the political considerat­ions of the governing elite. Ministers and regulators are empowered to rule by decree in practicall­y every industry subject to government oversight.

Constituti­onal democracy also meant racial socialism was (supposed to be) over. Almost immediatel­y after apartheid ended, and up to 2000, SA rose in the Fraser Institute’s rankings of economic freedom. Blacks were allowed to own property. Institutio­ns that controlled prices were dismantled. It is dishonest to claim that the Constituti­on and SA’s political settlement left the economy “untouched”. SA had a fundamenta­lly different economic order before democracy in 1994.

The political regime pre1993 encouraged intensive state involvemen­t in the economy, which produced the poverty we see today.

The belief that the Constituti­on only gave us “political freedom” but not “economic freedom” is false, as the latter was a consequenc­e of the former.

Improvemen­ts in the living conditions of South Africans have always come as a result of the law returning to its proper purpose: the regulation of conflict and the protection of liberty and property.

Where law has been used as a tool of social engineerin­g, as with apartheid and the current government’s political ambitions, living standards [and freedom] have fallen.

THERE IS NO NEED FOR A ‘DEMOCRATIS­ATION’ OF THE ECONOMY. IF LEFT ALONE, THE MARKET IS THE MOST DEMOCRATIC PHENOMENON

Of course, the Constituti­on did not relegate the government to a completely noninterve­ntionist role in society, and highlighte­d some areas that needed change. But the fabric of the Constituti­on indicates a clear respect for how economies function.

There is no need for an “economic Codesa” or a “democratis­ation” of the economy. If left alone, the market is the most democratic phenomenon imaginable. Indeed, we vote with our time, money and labour every second of every day, and each vote has a ripple effect throughout the economy that leads to the success of some firms, the failure of others, and to widespread social change.

Poverty has not been beaten in SA for the same reasons it was exacerbate­d during apartheid: an overactive state with no respect for the rule of law or for how markets function.

Whenever we have tried freedom, it has worked, but control has consistent­ly produced destitutio­n. This happened on a global scale when the prosperous and free West overcame the poor and socialist East during the Cold War. It happened in SA, where constituti­onal democracy overcame apartheid.

Let’s stick with freedom, and avoid any notion of overhaulin­g our constituti­onal order in favour of more paternalis­tic control.

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