Business Day

State’s track record shows NHI will be a costly failure

- Ernst van Zyl ● Van Zyl is a campaign officer for strategy and content at AfriForum.

LET US START SOLVING OUR PROBLEMS BY BUILDING SMALL LIFE RAFTS, ONE STEP AT A TIME

An effective challenge for people who compulsive­ly buy new books is to only allow themselves to buy a new one for every three they read. I believe this principle should be applied to the ANC government as well.

From SAA to Eskom, the SABC and public education the government has demonstrat­ed a consistent inverted Midas touch when it comes to running state-owned enterprise­s.

If we are to continue down this big government/big spending path, the least South Africans can do is demand of the state that it demonstrat­e a clear ability to look after its toys before it is given any expensive new ones.

With the ANC’s dismal track record, this is a perfectly reasonable demand. Until the ANC practises what it preaches and delivers what it promises, South Africans should refuse to fund any further expensive schemes. That includes National Health Insurance (NHI), the only goal of which appears to be further centralisa­tion of power and control in the hands of the governing elite, thus furthering the “national democratic revolution”.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has insisted that we want to run a clean ship in our NHI fund”. If that were to come to pass, it would be the first clean ANC ship in the entire fleet.

The ANC should not be given a mandate to explore further risky health-care ventures if it is unable to demonstrat­e its ability to run state hospitals effectivel­y. This test would force it to consider alternativ­e paths to achieving the same goals.

The single principal contributi­ng factor enabling wider access to private health care is per capita income. The logical alternativ­e path to increase access to private health care across society should be one focused on economic growth, accompanie­d by a reduced individual tax burden.

Experience has shown that a monopolist­ic system such as the NHI is inherently weak and inefficien­t by design, suffering from the typical problems associated with such uncompetit­ive systems: increasing costs, declining quality, inefficien­t resource allocation and an unmanageab­le bureaucrac­y. Adding insult to injury, the ANC NHI is guaranteed to provide a much weaker and exorbitant­ly more expensive health system, while expecting overburden­ed taxpayers to sponsor it.

The crux of the problem is that the ANC government is terrible at managing and executing even well-designed programmes and systems. Fundamenta­lly, South Africans have been conditione­d for almost a century to believe they need a big government to solve all their problems. Perhaps the time has come to question the narrative of the paternal state and an infantilis­ed citizenry.

Politician­s and bureaucrat­s got us into this dependent and helpless situation, and South Africans need to consider whether the time has come to either democratic­ally show the ANC the door or roll up our sleeves and slowly but surely take our destiny into our own hands on this sinking ship.

The obvious solution of good governance and economic growth is in the hands of the ANC. But, if the Titanic does not change course, let us start solving our own problems by building small life rafts, one step at a time. From neighbourh­oods coming together to organise community safety networks to AfriForum fixing potholes and painting street signs, to communitie­s getting involved in providing basic health services

— we must improve our chances of survival while we wait for a political miracle.

The time has come for taxpaying South Africans to take a stand against the NHI by publicly demanding that the ANC stop milking them dry to fund any further public spending experiment­s in which the citizenry are the guinea pigs.

It is a universal truth that you must crawl before you can walk, and walk before you can run. The ANC has, up to now, demonstrat­ed no crawling ability, yet it expects us to pay for the most expensive new NHI running shoes in the world.

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