Mail & Guardian

Only a socialist economy will end poverty

We need a new programme that truly aims to bring about real economic transforma­tion

- Zwelinzima Vavi

Figures from Statistics South Africa’s report, Poverty Trends in South Africa: An Examinatio­n of Absolute Poverty Between 2006 and 2015, show that 30.4-million of the country’s 55-million citizens lived below the upper poverty line of R992 a month — three million more than in 2011.

One in three South Africans lived on less than R797 a month, or half of the country’s 2015 mean annual household income of R19120, with more women affected than men, and children and the elderly hardest hit, and racial inequaliti­es continue to define poverty as largely a black African problem. For one in seven people, this meant extreme food poverty, or survival on R441 or less per person a month in 2015.

“The last five years, notably between 2011 and 2015, have been a rough economic roller coaster for South Africa — driven by a combinatio­n of internatio­nal and domestic factors, such as low and anaemic economic growth, continuing unemployme­nt levels, low commodity prices, higher consumer prices, lower investment levels, greater household dependency on credit and policy uncertaint­y,” says the report.

It also shows that this period saw an increase of extreme food poverty to 25.2% in 2015, up from 21.4% in 2011. The goal of the National Developmen­t Plan (NDP), to reduce the percentage of citizens in the lowest poverty category from 39% to zero, has failed abysmally. There was no reduction; there was a 1% increase.

The report also gave us the shocking figure that levels of household indebtedne­ss rose to 76.9% in 2015, up from 54.1% in 2000.

Executives’ salaries have risen from 50 to 500 times greater than workers’ wages. Many of the companies paying these grotesque amounts to their executives are the same as those demanding that unions agree to lower wages for their workers.

Others are outsourcin­g labour, using labour brokers and retrenchin­g staff to increase their profits.

Inequality and poverty are obviously also linked to shocking rates of unemployme­nt. As statistici­an general Pali Lehohla said when introducin­g his report: “The key driver of poverty is unemployme­nt.”

There was a net loss of 113000 jobs between the first and second quarters of this year. The rate of unemployme­nt remained at 27.7% — the highest level for 14 years. And the more realistic expanded definition of unemployme­nt, which includes an extra 3.1-million people who were available to work but did not look for it during the reference period, rose slightly to 36.6%.

These unemployme­nt figures relate directly to the levels of poverty because, on average, earners living in poor households support not just themselves but also people in their household and others to whom they send money. Ten percent of wage earners in poor households support themselves and four other people — 6% support five others, 4% support six others and some poor wage earners support up to 10 dependents.

Unemployme­nt, inequality and poverty must not only be measured in income and wealth, but also in the social wage.

Employment, or employabil­ity, depends on education levels. The StatsSA report shows that 79.2% of those without formal education were poor in 2015 — down from 86.4% in 2006, but up by 4% from 2011 — compared with 8.4% of those with a postmatric qualificat­ion in 2015.

In education, healthcare, sanitation and public transport, the appalling levels of service in a country where the rich minority elite enjoy world-class service provision make conditions for the poor majority even worse.

This descent into inequality has taken place on the watch of a ruling party that, for 23 years, has talked about the need for change, now called “radical economic transforma­tion”, while carrying out economic policies based on a capitalist free market and neoliberal policies, such as the Growth, Employment and Redistribu­tion strategy and the NDP, which have led to the opposite — soaring levels of inequality, unemployme­nt and poverty.

The economic crisis is now made worse by the explosion of corruption, looting and the capture of state institutio­ns by crooked politician­s and public officials, heads of state-owned enterprise­s and a widening layer of internatio­nal companies — not only the Guptas — who have shifted money from the public purse into the pockets of this new class of billionair­es.

This has robbed the country of billions, bankrupted state-owned enterprise­s, sabotaged public institutio­ns, undermined democratic accountabi­lity and led to the rating agencies downgradin­g the country to junk status, and a looming economic and social catastroph­e.

So what is to be done?

I welcome the fact that some business leaders and organisati­ons have now admitted that things have to change and are talking about the idea of “inclusive growth” and some sort of social compact between government, business and labour as the solution.

Yet a recent Deloitte report proves that this message has failed to reach most business leaders. It is further shown by the companies — in food, dairy, bread, cement, constructi­on, pharmaceut­ical, fire control and other sectors — found guilty of price-fixing, collusion over tenders and other anti competitiv­e practices.

But even if more business leaders join this call, it cannot change the basis of a system driven by the need to maximise profits. Important decisions on investment­s and disinvestm­ents are increasing­ly taken by asset managers and investment brokers, who do not look at the effect of this on workers’ jobs, communitie­s’ livelihood­s, the environmen­t or the longterm future of the economy.

The NDP is fatally flawed. It promises to reduce poverty, unemployme­nt and inequality by 2030, and reduce poverty-induced hunger to zero, but it can achieve none of these because its vision for the economy is rooted in the belief that wealth and power must remain in the hands of unaccounta­ble capitalist monopolies — still overwhelmi­ngly white-owned and operating under a neoliberal economic system enforced by rating agencies. This is the main reason we have this economic crisis.

Hence the South African Federation of Trade Unions, and a growing number of people around the world, are now demanding a fundamenta­lly different, socialist economy. We are determined to reinstate the real programme for radical economic transforma­tion — which has been hijacked by a corrupt faction — and to mobilise mass support for it, based on the call of the Freedom Charter that “there shall be jobs and security” for all. We are mobilising for a full-blown strike in November in support of these demands.

 ??  ?? In the dark: The country’s rich minority elite enjoys world-class amenities such as electricit­y, but the poor live in appalling conditions with limited services. Photo: David Harrison
In the dark: The country’s rich minority elite enjoys world-class amenities such as electricit­y, but the poor live in appalling conditions with limited services. Photo: David Harrison

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa