Sunday Tribune

Foreign investment crucial to growth

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KWAZULU-NATAL Premier Willies Mchunu has reiterated on various platforms the importance of the last two years of the term of office of this government.

He has stated firmly that radical economic transforma­tion should feature in all programmes of provincial government department­s, including municipali­ties.

He has singled out vulnerable members of society such as women, youth and Africans in particular as deserving special attention. He believes the redistribu­tion of wealth and the creation of an equal society will help strengthen our democracy.

It is for these reasons he has been interactin­g with captains of industry and organised labour to ensure the uptake of all programmes aimed at speeding up radical economic transforma­tion.

When we started the previous term of office in 2009, our province was reeling from the impact of the global economic meltdown. After many years of growth, South Africa’s economy was in recession for the first time since the new democratic dispensati­on.

The greatest impact of recession was in various sectors of the economy, especially manufactur­ing, with many industries closing down. Thousands of people were condemned to rural villages and peri-urban informal settlement­s with no means of survival.

Over the past eight years, programmes of the Anc-led provincial government have been implemente­d to help the people of this province to survive through the rough storm that all mankind in different parts of the globe has to navigate.

In August 2009, the provincial government establishe­d an Economic Council involving the major players in industry, especially, automotive, clothing and textile, manufactur­ing, constructi­on and other sectors which were more adversely affected.

The response of our national government to the global economic meltdown was focused on injecting more resources in sustaining growth in the absence of increased inflows of private sector investment­s.

Our province had its fair share of these investment­s, such as in the refurbishm­ent of the Durban and Richards Bay ports, the Ngula Eskom power station in the Drakensber­g, Dube Trade Port, King Shaka Internatio­nal Airport, several road upgrades and provincial capital projects that have been publicised in the past.

Importantl­y, the provincial government took a decision to focus on Foreign Direct Investment.

Government identified FDI as one of the crucial catalysts for economic developmen­t, income growth and employment creation.

In this regard, the provincial government has been inviting potential investors from other parts of the globe and directing them to the Dube Trade Port and the Richards Bay Industrial Developmen­t Zone (RBIDZ).

In pursuing foreign direct investment, the provincial government is guided by the Provincial Growth and Developmen­t Plans which is linked to the National Developmen­t Plan.

All efforts aimed at attracting foreign direct investment are bearing fruit, judging by the number of investment­s that have been pouring into the province.

In RBIDZ, to date, government has signed investment­s of more than R11.9 billion representi­ng different key sectors of the economy.

In the process more than 1 232 permanent jobs have been created with 3 136 jobs during the constructi­on phase.

Over the next few months RBIDZ will be working towards finalising investment­s of more than R4.1bn emanating from different sectors of our key focus. From these we expect 868 permanent jobs and 1 260 jobs during the constructi­on.

This week, the people of Kwazulu-natal welcomed the announceme­nt of a R4.5bn investment by Nyanza Light Metals at the RBIDZ.

Mchunu has reiterated that government’s quest to form partnershi­ps is motivated by the desire to ensure that ordinary people benefit from natural resources.

Government is calling for a partnershi­p with the private sector to convert our resources into wealth that builds rural economies for the benefit of communitie­s who are the real owners of the land.

Mchunu has stated government is aware that developmen­t may increase income and spatial inequaliti­es.

There are economic hubs such as Richards Bay, which were geared to serve the interests of the imperial metropolis at the expense of ordinary surroundin­g communitie­s.

The focus is on increasing sharply the entry of people from previously disadvanta­ged communitie­s into the mainstream economy.

We are creating a society in which there is no underdevel­opment and extreme poverty.

Poverty creates a vicious cycle of hunger and poverty across generation­s. It contribute­s to social instabilit­y such as crime and moral decay, and compounds the impact of under-developmen­t.

This government is therefore focusing on the eliminatio­n of all the root causes of poverty and under-developmen­t.

Mchunu is inviting captains of industry and foreign government­s to join us on a journey to create an equitable and prosperous province.

He has stated unequivoca­lly that our success as KZN is critical for the success of the continent.

• Sibiya is Mchunu’s spokespers­on.

 ??  ?? KZN Premier Willies Mchunu sees broader economic developmen­t as the key to liberation.
KZN Premier Willies Mchunu sees broader economic developmen­t as the key to liberation.
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