Business Day

Bad choices need to go

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Welcome though they may be, it would be a mistake to read the newly released quarterly growth figures as indicating a turnaround. Growth for the year is likely to remain anaemic, coming in at well under 2% at best, and quite possibly under 1%.

The reality is that SA faces enormous challenges to its prosperity, many of which are self-inflicted. Leave aside for the moment such deeply entrenched problems as the country’s poor educationa­l outcomes and its inefficien­t and politicise­d public service. It is breathtaki­ng that a country with unemployme­nt at 29% has introduced a national minimum wage and threatens tougher action to police the racial profile of workplaces. Or that, as SA peers into a fiscal black hole, its government promises an unaffordab­le national health insurance scheme.

Most concerning is that a country desperate to attract investment has placed the downgradin­g of property rights at the centre of its policy agenda. This is the drive of the governing party and government to introduce a policy of expropriat­ion without compensati­on and to go after savings and pensions through prescribed assets.

The economic consequenc­es of these will be as damaging as they are predictabl­e. A meaningful turnaround will hinge on the choices SA makes — a necessary start being to discard the bad ones its leadership has committed the country to.

Terence Corrigan Institute of Race Relations

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