Business Day

Bite down and push hard to escape the low-growth trap

- ● Mavuso is CEO of Business Leadership SA. Busi Mavuso

Sweek A has’a s thirdquart­er growth problem. The latest example was encapsulat­ed in this GDP figures: the economy contracted 0.6% from the previous quarter and 0.1% year on year.

The GDP numbers should prove a reality check after the buoyant political responses to second-quarter growth of 3.1%. That was off a low base and represente­d a return to normal after the disastrous first three months of the year, which were marked by the return of load-shedding.

What should linger in our consciousn­ess is that even at these anaemic GDP growth levels our energy grid is at its limit. Will we have the energy capacity if the economy grows beyond even the 1% mark? A question for another day, perhaps.

The growth problem points to the real possibilit­y of a ratings downgrade, possibly as early as March, by Moody’s Investors Service, the only agency that has us holding on

by a single thread to investment grade.

The third-quarter GDP numbers are therefore of great concern, especially since by most expectatio­ns the final three months of 2019 are not going to be much better. The fiscal position is not sustainabl­e and the pace of the reforms has been too sluggish to arrest the gradual slide in GDP growth forecasts, which are fundamenta­l to the ratings outlook.

That outlook depends fundamenta­lly on two things: the government’s ability to control expenditur­e, particular­ly the public sector wage bill, and its ability to raise revenue. Given limited scope for tax increases, a growing economy is the only way to improve revenue.

On the former, there has been a concerted effort by the Treasury to raise the alarm about its constraine­d fiscal position, and that is to be welcomed. Earlier this week, deputy finance minister David Masondo stressed the need for reforms ahead of the February budget and subsequent Moody’s review. He highlighte­d concerns about the public sector wage bill and further bailouts of troubled state-owned enterprise­s.

It will be a Herculean task for the government to convince the ratings agencies and bondholder­s, among others, of its determinat­ion to change, given that we are a mere two months away from the budget. To aid this task within the given time frame the state has to implement measures urgently to escape the low-growth trap we’ve been in for years.

Greater private sector investment has been the clarion call for some time, with some critics arguing that there is an investment strike. But if you comb through the poor growth numbers the one positive is that we’ve had two quarters of growth in private sector investment. The problem is that the rest of the economy is not picking up. That growth problem could be resolved by fully realising the growth potential of the private sector, especially small, medium and micro enterprise­s, (SMMEs), through the removal of red tape.

Investment pledges of R363bn at the recent investment summit, a 21% increase on the inaugural conference, are a brilliant start but we need to see more. We need job-intensive investment, an issue that was addressed on the last day of the summit. Initiative­s such as the long-awaited launch of the government’s Biz Portal, which provides a one-stop shop for company registrati­on, are positive steps.

Collaborat­ive efforts among the Companies and Intellectu­al Property Commission, SA Revenue Service, Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund, Compensati­on Fund, the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowermen­t Commission, the ZA Domain Name Authority and the big four banks have streamline­d the company registrati­on process. Prospectiv­e business owners can now register their companies on a single platform in one day for as little as R175.

PROSPECTIV­E BUSINESS OWNERS CAN REGISTER THEIR COMPANIES ON A SINGLE PLATFORM IN ONE DAY

This will count in SA’s favour on ease-of-doing business scorecards. But for optimal efficiency to be realised structural drawbacks such as uncertaint­y of energy supply must be resolved. The issue of spectrum has held the country back from fully benefiting from the fourth industrial revolution.

As much as the government under President Cyril Ramaphosa focuses on drawing investment into the country, it is in matters such as freeing up the private sector, in particular SMMEs, where we’ll find shorter, quicker pathways to a better growth outlook.

To get business confidence to improve and companies to invest in expansion, the government needs to create an enabling environmen­t. A more robust appetite for investment will help the government achieve its developmen­tal goals, including sustainabl­e employment creation. When it comes to batting off the pressure of ratings agencies, the state needs to support the Treasury in its attempts to strengthen our fiscal position.

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