The Citizen (Gauteng)

Asset sales are not endorsed

PLAN: LUKEWARM RESPONSE TO PROPOSAL

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Ace Magashule says business and labour must play a greater role in fostering growth.

South Africa’s ruling party approved a range of proposals to revive economic growth, but stopped short of endorsing Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s controvers­ial plan to sell some state assets.

There was “broad consensus” among members of the African National Congress’s top decision-making body about the challenges the nation faces and that business and labour must play a greater role in fostering growth, secretary-general Ace Magashule told reporters in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.

It was agreed the country needs to increase spending on infrastruc­ture, produce more renewable energy and fix ailing state companies, he said.

“South Africa urgently needs to turn around its economic performanc­e, as the rates of growth and investment are too low,” Magashule said.

There is a “clear determinat­ion to act decisively and resolutely,” he said.

The government is seeking to speed up reforms as business confidence slides and disquiet grows among investors about the deteriorat­ing state of the government’s finances and the threat debt-stricken power utility Eskom poses to the economy.

“The speech made nice headlines but didn’t have any meat on the bones,” said Simon Harvey, a London-based foreign-exchange analyst at Monex Europe. “Actual details on the ANC’s plan are needed for a substantia­l rand rally.”

Fixing Eskom

A plan to fix Eskom is still a work in progress and should be completed by month-end, when Mboweni is scheduled to deliver his mid-term budget, said Enoch Godongwana, the ANC’s head of economic transforma­tion.

The party does back a proposal, announced by President Cyril Ramaphosa in February, to split the utility into generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on units under a state holding company, he said.

Mboweni suggested in a policy paper released in August that the utility’s entire debt of R450 billion could be settled by selling off coal-fired power plants – an option opposed by the ANC’s labour-union allies.

He also wants the state to relinquish its near monopoly over the provision of electricit­y, port and rail services, make it easier to do business and maintain a flexible exchange rate, inflation targeting and sustainabl­e fiscal policy.

While the finance minister may not succeed in winning approval for all his proposals, the urgent need for a plan could mean at least some of them find easier passage.

Worker ownership

When asked about possible asset sales, Magashule said the ANC agreed that “models of worker and social ownership” will be considered.

Other measures agreed to by the ANC include:

Energy, transport and telecommun­ications need to be modernised and become more competitiv­e;

Costs and barriers to entry for small business need to be lowered;

Growth in industries that create jobs, including agricultur­e, tourism, clothing and mining, need to be prioritise­d;

Industrial and trade policy need to be refocused to promote competitiv­eness; and

The country’s future energy mix should be based on the lowest-cost option. – Bloomberg

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