Sunday World (South Africa)

‘ANC has know-how and will to make SA prosperous’

Big progress made in 30 years, says Tau

- By Jo-mangaliso Mdhlela jo@sundayworl­d.co.za

No other political party has the capacity to transform the economy, only the ANC has the vision and wherewitha­l to achieve this feat, Deputy Minister of Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Parks Tau told Sunday World.

On the sidelines of the Black Business Annual Summit that took place last week, Tau said only the ANC can identify “measurable and material progress” to move the country forward, 30 years after the 1994 miracle in which former president Nelson Mandela ushered the country into a new democratic dispensati­on.

He said the ANC has experience to run government, and that is why the people will return it to power to form the seventh administra­tion.

“Thirty years into our constituti­onal democracy, we can legitimate­ly identify measurable and material progress made to address the inherited apartheid backlogs.

“We can build an inclusive society. The pursuit of political freedom is directly linked to the pursuit of economic empowermen­t especially for the black majority,” Tau said.

He said the Ancled government took bold steps, using “programmat­ic and legislativ­e instrument­s” to implement broad-based black economic empowermen­t (B-BBEE) as a cornerston­e of economic policy.

“The B-BBEE is a cornerston­e of our economic policy. The ANC reaffirms its unwavering dedication to building a South Africa where opportunit­y is accessible to all, especially for young people, women and people in townships and rural areas,” Tau said. “As the ANC, we remain the only organisati­on committed to fully transform our society.

“There is a good story to tell about South Africa’s 30 years of democracy in action. This is confirmed by the independen­t institutio­ns, which includes the Statssa. “Statssa says data reveals that presently 82.4% of households in the country have access to piped water, and nearly 95% are able to access electricit­y,” he said. “Statssa data show that in 2022, 82.4% of households had access to piped water. The proportion of households using electricit­y increased from 58.1% in 1996 to 94.7% in 2022,” he said, adding that the size of the economy has tripled since 1996, with tax revenue moving from R143-billion in 1996 to more than R2.1-trillion last year.

The number of employed South Africans increased from eight million in 1994 to more than 16.7 million today. Regarding progress made at the B-BBEE Commission, he said since 2017, the commission has registered more than 500 B-BBEE ownership deals worth over R600-billion in transactio­n value, adding that since then black ownership in the economy averages 30%, with black women ownership averaging 14%.

“All this progress happens under the Anc-led government, and nobody can seek to underplay this progress achieved under the leadership of the ANC, even as we accept we can do more,” Tau said.

Turning to employment stats, Tau said in 1994 black people, representi­ng 73% of the population of the country, held about 40% of skilled jobs, but 30 years later, black South Africans, representi­ng about 80% of the population, held between 55%-60% of skilled jobs.

In terms of ownership, said Tau, in 1994 black South Africans owned less than 20% of businesses, today the number is more than 30%.

Turning to the role played by the Department of Trade, Industry and Competitio­n, as it relates to black industrial­ists, Tau said the scheme was launched in 2016 with the initial target of 100 firms, but to date the department has supported over 1700 black industrial­ist firms, out of R40-billion support spend with the annual GDP contributi­on of R183-billion.

Tau said township economic revitalisa­tion was key to black economic empowermen­t.

“Gauteng is being made feasible through the Township Economic Developmen­t Act being implemente­d and monitored for its impact in the Gauteng City Region since 2022.

He said: “South Africa exists as a member of the global community of nations. It is for this reason that we pushed hard for The Africa Continenta­l Free Trade Area and the Brics trading bloc, which presents South Africa with a chance to leverage opportunit­ies beyond its borders.

“The state will always intervene through regulatory instrument­s to arrest and dismantle, where possible, concentrat­ed forms of ownership since it stifles the participat­ion of SMMES.

“The ANC government is committed’” Tau said, “to expanding black industrial­ist programme to support 2000 companies, and to align fiscal and monetary policy with national goals and to develop an ecosystem of state banks in national, provincial and economic sectors, including a human settlement­s bank and to urge financial institutio­n to invest a portion of their funds in programmes of industrial­isation and infrastruc­ture developmen­t.”

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Parks Tau

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