Cape Times

Business Report celebrates the 5th anniversar­y of the NDP

- Khulekani Mathe is Senior General Manager: Financial Inclusion Division at the Banking Associatio­n South Africa. He also served in the Secretaria­t of the National Planning Commission from 2010 to 2016. Khulekani Mathe

SOUTH Africa today celebrates the 5th anniversar­y of the National Developmen­t Plan (NDP), the country’s long-term developmen­t plan drafted by the National Planning Commission in consultati­on with South Africans from all walks of life. To recognise this significan­t milestone, Business Report has joined forces with the Department of Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation and corporate SA to mark the achievemen­ts by hosting a series of national events designed to reflect on and celebrate the successful implementa­tion of the first stage of the plan. The first event will be hosted in Gauteng on September 12 and will be attended by captains of the country’s industry, ministers, the media and ordinary South Africans. The time has arrived to tell the NDP story. This will involve exposing the challenges as well as delineatin­g the successes achieved so far. Business Report invites all South Africans to get involved in making the NDP work for you. There is no “us” and “them”, there is just a “we”. We, the people can make this work. The NDP is after all the product of thousands of inputs and perspectiv­es of South Africans. It is a plan for a better future; a future in which no person lives in poverty, where no-one goes hungry, where there is work for all, a nation that is united in the vision of our Constituti­on. Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba recently stated: “There is no magic bullet to improving our credit rating; we must implement the NDP and the 9-point plan. It is in our own hands to improve confidence in our country; business and investor confidence will follow. Let us pull our weight and walk the talk, together as a nation.” And Nelson Mandela, who said: “Let there be work, bread, water and salt for all.” – Adri Senekal de Wet

AUGUST 15 marks five years since South Africa’s National Developmen­t Plan (NDP) was adopted in Parliament. It’s an opportune time to assess how far we have come towards attaining the noble goals of that plan, which aimed at eliminatin­g poverty and reducing inequality by 2030.

Normally, one would say that a longterm project like the NDP should not be judged in five years. Unfortunat­ely, we are already in a position to see that the right steps are not being taken to achieve the goals of the plan. At the time of its adoption in 2012, members of all political parties represente­d in the fourth Parliament rose to speak in support of the NDP.

If there was any difference among party members of Parliament, it was on whether the governing party would be able to implement this plan. The consensus was that, if implemente­d, the programme would help the country to address many of our intractabl­e problems.

Sadly, we have not built on that goodwill. Other considerat­ions seem to have overtaken that focus. The government has published its medium-term strategic framework, which is a five-year plan for the 2014-2019 administra­tion based on the NDP. But, quite frankly, that plan doesn’t cut it. If it did, we wouldn’t be where we are.

The economy is in recession and unemployme­nt is at its highest in 14 years.

Our sovereign credit rating has been downgraded to sub-investment grade and consumer and investor confidence is at its lowest in the democratic era.

Corruption is rampant across many sectors and there are serious governance weaknesses in all major state-owned companies. The state is hollowed out with many experience­d public servants having left the government, resulting in many department­s and major institutio­ns run by acting heads.

Most disturbing­ly, race relations have deteriorat­ed so much that almost every week a nasty racial incident takes place with black people at the receiving end.

We cannot say that intra-Alliance factionali­sm has affected implementa­tion of the NDP. Our leaders in the government simply lost focus. The weakening of our stateowned companies, and our various department­s, proves this.

It takes strong institutio­ns, with strong leadership, to implement a longterm plan. It also takes a while to build an institutio­n that can run its affairs effectivel­y. It’s unfortunat­e that the very few such institutio­ns in our government have been weakened or are under severe attack.

One was the SA Revenue Service. The other was the National Treasury. Both have been weakened significan­tly in recent years. Our crime fighting institutio­ns and prosecutin­g authority have been extremely weak for nearly a decade. The significan­t progress made in turning around the Department of Home Affairs, to the delight of many citizens who are now able to receive their identity documents and passports within a week of applying, is at risk.

The attacks on the South African Reserve Bank is cause for grave concern, because it indicates that those who want to weaken our institutio­ns for their own benefit will stop at nothing.

While the NDP came at a point when the economy wasn’t doing great, following the global financial crisis, it gave us something with which we could mobilise people to turn the situation around. Instead of doing that, we have gone in the opposite direction and destroyed even the limited capacity that we had to help implement the NDP.

One sees this throughout the system, especially with the removal of senior public servants. The case of the Sassa chief executive, directors-general of the department­s of Water and Sanitation and Agricultur­e Forestry and Fisheries come to mind. Some structures have been run for a considerab­le period, with people in acting capacity. Just in case someone thinks I am making all of this up, think of SABC, Prasa, Eskom, and until recently, SAA. These acting heads cannot really plan and implement over the long term because their positions are uncertain.

At any given point, 10 or more government department­s have had acting heads. That is not how one builds the capacity to implement a long-term plan like the NDP. This is not to say that all is lost. One of the six pillars of the NDP, which was not fully appreciate­d at the time, but which has become more relevant, is its call for active citizenry. I was fortunate to be involved in formulatin­g the NDP, and at the time we recognised that the plan would not be delivered by government alone if the citizenry outsourced its responsibi­lity to the state and did not play a direct role.

The NDP called for citizens to take part in their own developmen­t at community level, but also by holding accountabl­e those entrusted with the responsibi­lity of delivering services.

We see now that we need South Africans in their numbers, in the various sectors of society, to raise their voices against wrong-doing and to make sure that the decisions taken benefit all of society and not just a few people.

We also need to work together, across sectors in an interdisci­plinary manner, as the NDP recommende­d. Progress was made in that regard – particular­ly in building relations between the government and business demonstrat­ed in the formation of the CEO Initiative. Recent developmen­ts have destroyed that trust and we will have to work hard at rebuilding it.

There are limits to what any sector can achieve acting alone. This is not rocket science. We know we have done better as a country when we pull together, and poorly when we do the opposite.

It’s going to take a while for things to settle politicall­y and for the government to truly align its actions with the NDP’s strategic vision. But there is no reason why, after that dust settles, that we shouldn’t be back on track.

The NDP says nothing that has not been said before. It simply organises ideas in a logical and implementa­ble manner.

It talks about the need to grow the economy, create employment and address poverty and inequality. These are accepted broad objectives. It does go into detail in some areas – for instance on fixing education and health. It also presents some innovative ideas on how to address land reform and revitalise rural economies. All South Africans would agree that we need to pursue these objectives among others. What we lack at the moment is the leadership to harness our collective energy as a nation and channel it in the right direction.

Our five-year-old NDP is a pragmatic plan, poetic in parts, designed with no particular ideology in mind. I know its detractors have accused it of being neoliberal, but that’s not entirely true. It contains ideas that resonate across the political and ideologica­l spectrum.

It advocates for a developmen­tal state, which is far from a neoliberal concept. A capable, developmen­tal state, that builds the capacity to uplift its people, eliminates poverty and reduces inequality.

It remains as relevant as ever – to the government and the people. It is high time that we rediscover this roadmap to our country’s developmen­t and recommit – as active citizens – to make it work.

We need South Africans in their numbers to raise their voices against wrong-doing and to make sure the decisions taken benefit all of society, not just a few.

 ??  ?? Khulekani Mathe, Senior General Manager: Financial Inclusion Division at the Banking Associatio­n SA calls for working together.
Khulekani Mathe, Senior General Manager: Financial Inclusion Division at the Banking Associatio­n SA calls for working together.
 ??  ?? Khulekani Mathe says we need to work together to solve South Africa’s problems.
Khulekani Mathe says we need to work together to solve South Africa’s problems.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa