Business Day

SA is a good place for faux PhDs to hide

- Shawn Hagedorn Hagedorn (@shawnhaged­orn) is an independen­t strategy adviser.

Those who want to pretend they have doctorates should, like a certain highprofil­e director now under fire, choose internatio­nal economics and work in SA.

They’ll get away with it, because our policy debates take little notice of how the global economy has evolved.

Most high-profile economists focus on capital markets, where the central challenge is pricing securities. While this adds much value by improving capital allocation, pricing securities is quite different from developing effective public policy.

Despite our many competent capital market economists often providing valuable insights, they don’t offer workable solutions, as their protocols and tools are designed to improve returns on capital. Though our obscene level of entrenched youth unemployme­nt reflects negatively on labour economists, this is somewhat unfair as this crisis traces to policies dismissive of globally determined success requiremen­ts.

We need more and better internatio­nal economists working with developmen­t experts to design policies that stoke commercial fervour alongside robust job creation. Instead, our debates stoke identity politics while indulging “flavour of the day” faux solutions.

Rather than pursue sustained high growth through global integratio­n, our public and private sector leaders have prioritise­d investment-led growth. This was expected to realign policies better with commercial realities. Instead, as with overfishin­g in a lake, the negative effects compounded.

Labour and developmen­t economists should have been shouting that this narrow path was always about rewarding capital, not labour. This should then have spurred internatio­nal economists to spotlight how our policies are inversions of those common to this era’s many successful emerging economies.

Speaking at the recent World Economic Forum (WEF) about the Brics bloc, finance minister Enoch Godongwana said: “Our economies, particular­ly SA, have been heavily dependent on the West, so a delinking for us is quite critical; in other words, changing trading patterns.”

Yet this disregards how SA’s unemployme­nt crisis traces to policies that preclude this era’s core developmen­t catalyst: value-added exporting. Today’s many rapidly advancing nations to integrate achieve a this, substantia­l’portion but SA s of their young workers into global supply chains. Nearly all countries engage in the struggle policymake­rs and business leaders routinely reject the challenge. Our patronagem­inded political elites frame policies around injustices at the expense of competitiv­eness, while most business leaders risk being replaced if they disappoint investors.

Our elites rejecting global economic realities causes a majority of SA’s “born-free” adults to become permanentl­y marginalis­ed. This burgeoning generation­al chasm is articulate­d by teenagers snarling: “I don’t care about past injustices, I just want a job.”

In lieu of the prospects and dignity that jobs provide, most are expected to express electoral gratitude for subsubsist­ence grant payments.

Another way of assessing our policy debates is to consider billionair­e entreprene­ur Elon Musk’s preference for drilling down to first principles.

What should the primary objective of our economic policies be? The ANC is highly effective at framing issues around injustices, and its go-to economic injustice issue is inequality.

SA is easily one of the most unequal countries in terms of income and wealth. We also have the highest youth unemployme­nt. Yet we have nothing like a solution for either.

Focusing on inequality has benefited the ANC politicall­y while justifying policies that sustain patronage and undermine job creation. Our national dialogue sidesteps this fundamenta­l truth by dancing, sometimes prancing, around it.

We won’t meaningful­ly reduce inequality without first making abundant progress at reducing youth unemployme­nt.

Yet it is delusional to think we can reduce youth unemployme­nt noticeably in SA while disdaining the central success factor common to highgrowth economies: integratio­n into global supply chains.

The ANC rejects this path, as evidenced by its antibusine­ss and anti-Western policies.

People shouldn’t misreprese­nt themselves. Nor should any of us condone our elites pretending they’ve achieved the expertise to frame our challenges, let alone solve them.

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