Business Day

Recession turns up heat on Ramaphosa

- ANTHONY BUTLER

SA’s descent into a technical recession has come as a blow to President Cyril Ramaphosa’s economic hopes. Given limited fiscal space, heavily indebted parastatal­s and a nervous private sector, Ramaphosa will now need to make good on his promises with regard to foreign direct investment.

He will come under heavy pressure to conjure up some good news at the investment conference scheduled for October. Ramaphosa initially claimed the tidy sum of about $100bn in new investment would be raised over five years.

The investment drive has become the signature theme of Ramaphosa’s tenure in the Union Buildings. He has sought out investment partners on the African continent, in the Middle East, across the global South, and among the countries of the Organisati­on of Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t.

This week he has been in China, where opaque energy sector loans have already been promised for the ailing Eskom. SA is now also pursuing Chinese funds for infrastruc­ture investment and for the creation of special economic zones.

Earlier in the year the president celebrated investment accords in the Middle East, including two ostensible $10bn commitment­s from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Saudi Arabia. These deals were controvers­ial, not least because little detail was provided about their substance.

It seems likely the key area for collaborat­ion is defence and security. A February 2017 memorandum of understand­ing between umbrella organisati­ons in SA and the UAE suggests that troubled state-owned enterprise Denel, and Paramount Group, Africa’s largest private sector defence contractor, are SA’s coveted players.

Paramount sells not just weapons systems but also “solutions”. Yet SA pledged in the aftermath of apartheid not to supply weapons to foreign parties that might use them systematic­ally to violate human rights. It is difficult to see the current behaviour of Saudi Arabia and UAE in Yemen as conforming to this promise.

Bellingcat, an internatio­nal non-profit organisati­on, has noted that the Hodeidah hospital attack in Yemen on August 2, which claimed the lives of dozens of civilians, was probably the result of a mortar strike from Saudi or UAE forces. According to Bellingcat, the munition fragments “appear to share characteri­stics with munitions manufactur­ed by Rheinmetal­l Denel Munition” ,a German-SA consortium-ofconvenie­nce that came to prominence last week as a result of a devastatin­g explosion in its Somerset West plant.

In some eyes, even such unsavoury business partners are less unpalatabl­e than the former colonial power, which inconvenie­ntly remains SA’s largest foreign investor. The UK is oozing fake humility as a result of the Brexit disaster: SA is a key pillar in the Conservati­ve government’s strategy to forge ostensible post-European Union trading and investment relationsh­ips through a largely imaginary Commonweal­th portal.

The residual EU is even more important for SA’s prospects. The eurozone – not China — is SA’s largest trading partner by far. It also contains major investors such as Germany, whose Mercedes Benz confirmed in June that it would invest €600m in expanding its SA operations.

The commitment­s of internatio­nal carmakers are precarious, however, dependent as they are on our costly motor industry support programme and on the Great Satan’s African Growth and Opportunit­y Act, which allows tariff-free export of cars assembled in SA to the US.

These are difficult times indeed. Ramaphosa needs to seek out partners wherever they can be found. Pride, anticoloni­al sentiment and moral scruples will all have to wait for better days. Butler teaches public policy at the University of Cape Town.

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