Business Day

The promise and the promises of 1994 have been betrayed

- DAVID SHAPIRO ● Shapiro is chief global equity strategist at Sasfin Wealth.

Nearly 30 years ago, in April 1994, I stood in line with my wife, Linda, and our domestic helper, Anna Makgopa, at Fairways Primary School, to cast our vote in what was termed “SA’s first democratic election”.

The usually straight-faced and impassive Anna was beaming with pride. My mother-inlaw, Esther Barsel, voting in Yeoville, was as joyous as a bride on her wedding day. For Esther, it was vindicatio­n after 50 years of political activism and struggle; a time during which she was harassed, jailed and banned from public life.

SA was the toast of the world. Everyone wanted a piece of the Rainbow Nation. Global leaders queued to shake hands with the newly inaugurate­d president Nelson Mandela, while internatio­nal businesses, which had shunned the apartheid government, rushed to open factories and stores.

Optimism about the country’s future abounded. The fall of communism in the USSR, the rise of China, globalisat­ion, the deregulati­on of the JSE, the introducti­on of mobile phones and the worldwide expansion of the internet created unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies to drive the economy of this infant administra­tion to new peaks.

Thirty years on, we’re asking how we let our destiny slip. SA’s economy is forecast to grow at a sluggish 1.3% a year for the next three years, far below the global mean. Our unemployme­nt rate is among the highest in the world, our debt levels are becoming unmanageab­le, crime and corruption are out of control, power is rationed, our roads are disintegra­ting and our railway system is dysfunctio­nal. Worst of all, we lack the will and means to fix our problems.

The JSE reflects our fall from grace. In 1994, there were more than 600 listed businesses. Industrial concerns — food, engineerin­g, electronic­s, clothing, footwear and textiles — made up 45% of the market value. Mining was 43% of the exchange’s capitalisa­tion, with financials, including property, comprising the balance. The top 10 most valuable listings added up to a mere 28% of the total capitalisa­tion, compared with 70% today, whereas now most of these businesses have no operations in the country.

Now there are no more than 200 actively traded stocks on the JSE, 100 of which are valued at under R10bn each. To put the JSE’s size in perspectiv­e, Microsoft is three times larger than the entire JSE, bearing in mind that the JSE boards include internatio­nal giants such as BHP, AB InBev, British American Tobacco and Richemont. A further worry is that trade volumes can barely support a traditiona­l stockbroki­ng firm.

Investors have also become a lot poorer; $100 invested on the JSE 30 years ago would be worth $294 (3.3% a year) compared with $100 invested in US markets that would be worth $1,029 (8.1% a year). Remember, the period we’re measuring included the Chinese-fuelled commodity supercycle, of which our country was a prime beneficiar­y.

The JSE’s underperfo­rmance doesn’t fall solely on the government’s indolence, incompeten­ce and ineffectiv­eness. Corporates played their part as well. Flattered by armies of internatio­nal investment bankers who knocked on the boardroom doors offering offshore deals, while management teams overrated their abilities and underrated climate change. Shoprite, Investec, Sasol, Discovery, Woolworths, Tiger Brands, Spar and Famous Brands are among an extended list of businesses that gave life to the word “impairment” and the adoption of the term “earnings from continuing operations”.

Yet, we can’t ignore how the governing party’s policies of plunder undermined growth, and how establishe­d manufactur­ing, engineerin­g and constructi­on firms bear the scars of the ANC government’s failure. You can pick up Murray & Roberts, Bowler Metcalf, Hulamin, ArcelorMit­tal and Nampak for a mere R5.5bn. It demonstrat­es how, in 30 years, we’ve slumped from the comfort of the C-suite to the mail room in the basement.

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 ?? /123RF/Xtock Images ?? Sluggish: SA’s economy is forecast to grow at 1.3% a year for three years, far below the global mean.
/123RF/Xtock Images Sluggish: SA’s economy is forecast to grow at 1.3% a year for three years, far below the global mean.

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