Cape Times

We must win the war on poverty

- Dr Thami Mazwai Dr Thami Mazwai is special adviser to the Minister of Small Business Developmen­t but writes in his personal capacity.

THE COMPETITIO­N Commission’s decision to investigat­e the Vodacom deal is most welcome if we must win the struggle against poverty, unemployme­nt and inequality. It made this announceme­nt two weeks ago and one hopes that such investigat­ions must be extended to other areas of concern. The high levels of concentrat­ion in our economy militate against entreprene­urship and enterprise creation.

They also undermine Black Economic Empowermen­t as it must not only be distributi­onal and transforma­tive, but also generate new wealth. One of the manifestat­ions of new wealth is the emergence of thousands of new black-owned small businesses. Thus, an enabling environmen­t is required which, among other things, dilutes the dominance of the incumbents as they will do all to protect their market.

The statutory obligation of the commission is to facilitate competitio­n, thus make entry and survival easier for new players, more so black ones. Obviously, such an investigat­ion is not welcome by many in the private sector for three reasons: firstly, it focuses attention on the structure of an unfair economy in which they benefit; secondly, and as stated, it creates new competitio­n and, thirdly, who is next after Vodacom?

We have had arguments that the tender process was open and fair and, it was said, the government would reduce costs by 30 percent to 40 percent. There was also talk of political pressure exerted on the commission.

I personally welcome political pressure as it is in the interests of the country and is done through the law and the appropriat­e institutio­n.

Millions participat­ed in various aspects of the struggle. Many went to jail, others paid the ultimate price, many more lost their livelihood­s in various phases of the struggle, tens of thousands of others were in exile, and all these sacrifices were to create this new democracy.

That 23 years into democracy it serves only a few as the majority of South Africans wallow in poverty, unemployme­nt and inequality, is an unforgivab­le injustice. Thus, and stressing the point, the issue is not the process, but the impact. Giving one major player such a massive contract results in a lot of small players, many of them black, directly or indirectly losing business.

In addition, this one big player gets massive clout to influence activity and prices, and dictate issues in the sector. All in all, and because of the above, this translates into more job losses, with the majority unemployed being black.

To look at issues globally, the World Bank, IMF and OECD have warned that as South Africa’s economy is still highly concentrat­ed, creating jobs is not going to happen that easily. Sectors are dominated by two or three big players. Vertical and horizontal linkages have become the order of the day and enable these major players to dominate.

Collusion in the market comes in many ways. As argued earlier, smaller players are the casualties and in South African language, black small players. The scenario, even in 2017, is that formal black businesses, are a mere 10 to 15 percent of the formal sector as the past perpetuate­s itself. Most blacks are primarily in the informal sector as reports by StatsSA and the Department of Trade and Industry review of small business released in 2015 reflect.

The argument on 30 percent to 40 percent savings by the government misses the point. The government has a responsibi­lity to keep people in jobs, and that is its primary mandate. Hence when elections come political parties promise jobs as they ask for votes. If a policy will result in job losses, the government must think twice.

That the Treasury itself is the initiator of such a policy simply blows the mind in an environmen­t in which the government claims it is fighting unemployme­nt. Giving Vodacom such a fat contract worsens unemployme­nt.

Regretfull­y, Treasury has in the past been responsibl­e for policies that simply militate against empowermen­t and the Black Business Council can attest to this. Obviously, while this is not necessaril­y a deliberate or improper act by the Treasury; it does suggest officials did not investigat­e the impact on entreprene­urship and small business developmen­t.

Lastly, according to national data 10 percent of the population owns at least 90 percent to 95 percent of all assets, although they earn about 55 percent to 60 percent of income.

On the other hand, the poorest 50 percent of the population, who share about 10 percent of income, own no measurable wealth. This is the reality of South Africa. No police or military prowess stands a chance against empty stomachs and people who brought apartheid to its knees can bring down our democracy if their stomachs stay empty. We ignore the hungry and angry masses at our peril; they have nothing to lose except empty stomachs.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa