The Citizen (Gauteng)

SA: prepare for the worst

- Danny Bradlow

SARCHI Professor of Internatio­nal Developmen­t Law and African Economic Relations, University of Pretoria

Prudence teaches that societies experienci­ng difficult and uncertain times should hope for the best but prepare for the worst. South Africa should take this lesson seriously. It is facing a serious crisis. South Africa’s economy is growing too slowly to address its profound challenges of poverty, inequality and unemployme­nt. Social tensions are rising. Business is not transformi­ng quickly enough.

The governance and solvency of key state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) are collapsing. Government finances are deteriorat­ing. Credit downgrades may limit government access to finance. The institutio­ns of governance are decaying. The complex political situation is paralysing policymaki­ng.

Countries facing analogous crises of confidence like Nigeria, Poland and Turkey have had to seek Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) support.

South Africa can hope that the situation will improve. But it should also plan for the possibilit­y that it will not and that confidence in the government’s ability to manage its deteriorat­ing financial situation will evaporate.

This will lead to both higher borrowing costs and reduced access to financing for the government and state-owned enterprise­s. It could also lead to stateowned enterprise­s defaulting on their debts and their creditors calling in their government guarantees. As government loses the ability to fund its operations, it will be forced to turn to the IMF. It is the one organisati­on that can help it regain access to financing – on condition SA agrees to implement an IMF approved set of reforms.

No one wants an IMF programme for South Africa. First, it means the government accepting an outsider, dominated by rich countries, overseeing its economic policies. Second, IMF support will be conditione­d on the country agreeing to painful reforms such as:

Reducing the government’s budget deficit and the current account deficit so that it can meet its financial obligation­s

Deregulati­on and labour market reforms designed to encourage investment.

But if South Africa begins preparing for this possibilit­y it may be able to mitigate its worst effects and be ready to exploit whatever opportunit­ies it creates.

Negotiatin­g with the IMF

The South African government has considerab­le experience dealing with the IMF, which regularly visits each of its member states to consult about the state of its economy— the most recent IMF mission visited SA in early November. However, it is over 20 years since SA negotiated a financing arrangemen­t with the IMF.

Unless challenged, the IMF is likely to condition its financial support on a standard recipe of reforms. However, over time the IMF has become more amenable to supporting the programmes proposed by its member states. It has learned that, while there are similariti­es between macro-economic crises in different countries, there is more than one strategy for resolving such crises. In fact, the optimal solution depends on each country’s institutio­nal arrangemen­ts, history, and particular economic, social, environmen­tal and political characteri­stics. It also depends on the impact of macro-economic policies on such social factors as gender, equity and environmen­tal and social sustainabi­lity.

Yanis Varoufakis, former Greek finance minister, reports in his book on his experience­s negotiatin­g with Greece’s creditors that countries like Poland, through careful planning and shrewd negotiatio­ns, were able to convince the IMF to follow their plan rather than the IMF’s standard approach. His book also shows that the cost of failing to prepare adequately for negotiatio­ns like these can be very high indeed.

So what should South Africa do to ensure that it gets the best possible deal?

First, South Africa must establish clear and realistic objectives for the plan that it wants the IMF to support.

Second, it must get its diplomatic ducks in a row so that it can strike the best possible deal.

Fixing the budget

As a priority SA should focus on restoring a sustainabl­e budget situation. This will require government to make some painful policy choices about levels of expenditur­es as well as the purposes for which funds are allocated.

The government can build confidence in these choices if it can show that:

the benefits exceed the costs and that the costs are being equitably shared.

Policy choices are based on both the human rights imperative­s stipulated in the SA constituti­on and on promoting growth.

it’s serious about addressing the governance problems in state owned enterprise­s and government department­s.

it is complying with the legal procedures applicable to government finances and the open budgeting processes that it used in the past.

Finally, government must encourage other social actors – such as business and labour who have contribute­d to the crisis – to help mitigate the pain. A demonstrat­ion of broad support would help convince the IMF to support the government’s strategy.

Diplomacy

As Varoufakis’ experience shows, the cost of under-estimating the impact of internatio­nal economic diplomacy on the outcomes of complex internatio­nal financial negotiatio­ns can be unacceptab­ly high.

The South African government must therefore prepare to sell its programme to the IMF. This requires it to appoint negotiator­s who have a good understand­ing of both the IMF as an institutio­n and global financial diplomacy. They can make the South African case in the way that is most likely to convince the IMF staff and board of executive directors to support the SA programme.

These negotiator­s should also seek to exploit all the benefits SA can harvest from its membership in the institutio­ns of global economic governance.

For example, they can tap the experience and expertise of groups like the G24, a lobby group for the interests of IMF developing member states in which South Africa participat­es, to help it prepare for these negotiatio­ns.

They can also draw on the stores of informatio­n in internatio­nal organisati­ons like the IMF, the World Bank and the African Developmen­t Bank that have had extensive experience dealing with developing countries facing macro-economic crises. Access to this informatio­n should be a benefit of membership.

The executive directors that represent SA at these institutio­ns can help the government gain access to this informatio­n and, if appropriat­e, identify the relevant experts to consult.

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