Business Day

Poor pay for ANC policies

-

Nothing is quite so cruel as to deny a person the chance to find a job so that they might improve their lives as well as those of the people around them. SA’s rising unemployme­nt rate is therefore a particular­ly terrible thing, but it is made worse by the fact that it is also the predicted and predictabl­e result of the policies of the government.

Threats to property rights, minimum wage laws, denying parents sufficient control over the schools attended by their children, and race-based empowermen­t edicts have the collective effect of choking off investment and growth.

Yet, in the face of the evidence, many of these policies continue to be championed by the government, organised business and many commentato­rs as virtuous and necessary for the economic emancipati­on of poor South Africans.

Quite the opposite is true, and the poor are paying a terrible price for the ideologica­l fixations of SA’s leaders.

Truly virtuous policy would price poor people into work by deregulati­ng the labour market, lift SA’s economic competitiv­eness by abandoning race-based empowermen­t edicts, improve the education prospects of young people by allowing parents to take operationa­l control of schools, and secure property rights to attract the investment needed to achieve a significan­tly higher rate of economic growth.

Frans Cronje

CEO, Institute of Race Relations

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa