The Citizen (Gauteng)

ANC backs Tito’s bitter pill

NEC: DYSFUNCTIO­NAL SOES TO GO – BUT NOT ALL AGREE TO HARSH MEDICINE It did not necessaril­y mean Cosatu and SACP were satisfied, warns Godongwana.

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

The ANC has endorsed Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s plan to get rid of state-owned enterprise­s that ‘were not functionin­g’ but will discuss it with the alliance partners.

The ANC has endorsed Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s plan to get rid of state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) that were malfunctio­ning, offering to bring in worker and social models of ownership in running these entities.

ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule told The Citizen yesterday they planned to get rid of SOEs that “were not functionin­g” but the matter would be discussed with the alliance partners.

He declined to name the entities identified.

“We are in discussion with our allies. The Party (SACP) is saying to us implement your resolution­s,” Magashule said.

But the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) said it would oppose any privatisat­ion of SOEs and that its position on this would not change.

Cosatu’s national spokespers­on, Sizwe Pamla, said the workers had terrible experience­s with the privatisat­ion of former SOEs such as Iscor and Telkom, where employees faced layoffs.

“Our understand­ing was the ANC did not discuss Mboweni’s paper, but the state of the economy and proposed suggestion­s on the table. It was not Mboweni’s paper but economy informed by National Treasury proposals and those of relevant parties.

“Our problem remains that the paper failed to include other department­s in the economic cluster. Cosatu’s input and position on SOEs had never changed: we reject privatisat­ion and that is the position we adopted since 2003.”

Pamla said the federation could entertain the involvemen­t of the private sector in SOEs in certain circumstan­ces – but if only the government remained the majority shareholde­r.

The ANC national executive committee (NEC) resolved to prioritise the restructur­ing of Eskom and deal with the unsustaina­ble financial position of other SOEs, including SAA and Denel.

It became clear from his smile and cracking of jokes with journalist­s at the media conference that Mboweni has had his way as the governing ANC top brass largely accepted his economic recovery blueprint.

In an unpreceden­ted move, Magashule and his archrivals, Mboweni and chair of the ANC economic transforma­tion subcommitt­ee Enoch Godongwana, jointly addressed the briefing.

Magashule had in the past differed with Mboweni and Godongwana on ANC economic policy approach, including whether the Reserve Bank mandate should be changed.

The trio said the NEC had agreed on a range of economic policy interventi­ons to achieve a higher rate of economic growth and inclusion. The proposals do not include labour matters that were still to be finalised at the multi-stakeholde­r Nedlac and the Alliance Political Council, a forum of the ANC, SACP and Cosatu leadership­s.

“There was a broad consensus across all presentati­ons on the severity of the challenges and the key economic tasks of the moment,” Magashule said.

“The NEC confirmed that the overarchin­g objective of economic policy remains to build an inclusive economy by stimulatin­g investment, growth and job creation and thereby decisively tackling poverty and inequality, raising living standards and improving the well-being of all South Africans.”

Godongwana said the NEC approved Eskom’s restructur­ing into entities for generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on but stressed this was not privatisat­ion.

He said although Mboweni’s document was accepted, it did not necessaril­y mean that Cosatu and the SACP were fully satisfied with some aspects of it but the party was determined the meet them at Alliance Political Council level. The council was where the three partners discussed mutual interests and tried to reach compromise­s.

Magashule said the NEC agreed on a policy package that more effectivel­y promoted sustainabl­e demand, together with economic reforms that lay the foundation­s for medium- and long-term impact. “These reforms must provide especially young people, women and people with disabiliti­es with opportunit­ies to participat­e in the economy, while expanding the industrial capabiliti­es of the economy,” he said.

The NEC further endorsed the new approach to develop various spatial economic initiative­s, including special economic zones, industrial parks and district municipali­ty interventi­ons.

Eskom can be restructur­ed into three entities

 ?? Picture: Emmanuel Croset ?? TITO MBOWENI.
Picture: Emmanuel Croset TITO MBOWENI.
 ?? Picture: Emmanuel Croset ?? THEY MUST GO. ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule says the party backs Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s plan to get rid of SOEs that ‘were not functionin­g’.
Picture: Emmanuel Croset THEY MUST GO. ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule says the party backs Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s plan to get rid of SOEs that ‘were not functionin­g’.

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