Business Day

A new compact is needed, with business at its centre

- ● Mhlanga is chief economist of Alexander Forbes.

Stats SA released GDP figures for the third quarter this week, which told us the economy contracted by 0.6% on a seasonally adjusted and annualised basis. This disappoint­ing outcome means that for economic growth to average the current economists’ consensus forecast for 2019 of 0.5%, the economy will have to expand by 4.1% in the fourth quarter. By any measure that seems far-fetched.

If growth continues to decline, tax revenue collection­s will eventually decline as well.

Meanwhile, the need for critical social spending that keeps the country from imploding hardly recognises that the coffers are no longer being replenishe­d. This is a historical and current fact, but let’s look forward.

To avoid the short-termism that prevails across society, I think of structural economic progress, and my personal developmen­t, in terms of decades. It takes a decade to devise, structure and implement a series of actions yielding mission-critical outcomes establishi­ng a new base that is irreversib­le unless there is deliberate action to undo such change. The mission for policymake­rs, business and labour union leaders and every South African, should be the reduction of the triple chronic challenges of unacceptab­ly high levels of unemployme­nt, particular­ly for the youth, as well as poverty and inequality in a way that keeps the environmen­t sustainabl­e.

While the very short-term might seem as if we are fast approachin­g a low-growth trap

if we are not already there needing urgent and decisive reforms before the window of revival closes, it helps to step back and think about the possibilit­ies and what is needed to realise them over the next decade. Can we reduce poverty, unemployme­nt and inequality? Yes. Why haven’t we done it over the past decade if we can do it in the next one?

I believe it is because most leaders across the spectrum have been deliberate­ly selfservin­g through a toxic rentseekin­g mechanism that enriched a tiny proportion of the population at the expense of the majority. As we now can see, it is not sustainabl­e. The social compacts made in years gone by did not yield the desired results, as shown by our 29% jobless rate, status as one of the most unequal countries in the world and schoolchil­dren dying in pit latrines.

This means a new social compact between labour, business and government is urgently required as a first step. In this new social compact the state must be ruthless in dealing with corruption and implement economic reforms that will make it easier to do business. The needed reforms have already been streamline­d by the Treasury strategy. They are not entirely new, but represent a new stance by the government, where business is seen as a driver of economic growth and employment.

Labour must depart from its current position of protecting existing jobs and wages while reducing the chance, almost to zero, for those who are out of the labour market to obtain employment, and start championin­g and supporting the economic reforms that can lead to the creation of new jobs. Business must help solve SA’s problems, while remaining profitable. It can no longer sit on the sidelines and say inequality, unemployme­nt and poverty must be solved by the government. Jobs are created by businesses as they solve society’s problems profitably.

Business must be at the centre of solving SA’s social problems. For this to happen the next decade should be about economic reforms those that can be implemente­d quickly must be put in place without delay to build momentum for the more difficult ones. A new social compact with one mission to reduce unemployme­nt, poverty and inequality is critical to preventing self-serving rent seekers from hijacking good intentions.

 ??  ?? ISAAH MHLANGA
ISAAH MHLANGA

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