The Citizen (KZN)

No consensus on SA’s revival

POST COVID-19: ANC AND BUSINESS DIFFER

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State lacks capacity to implement proposals, Intellidex says.

South Africa is awash with plans on what’s needed for an economy battered by the coronaviru­s pandemic and power shortages. What’s missing is consensus on which proposals to implement. Blueprints released last week by Business for South Africa, an alliance of the main business groups, and the ruling party’s economic transforma­tion committee both called for the revival to be underpinne­d by a massive infrastruc­ture investment drive – an idea the government flighted last month.

But they differ over other key issues, including where the money should come from, and the role of the state.

With gross domestic product expected to shrink as much as 10% this year due to a lockdown to curb, the spread of Covid-19, a common vision and decisive leadership are needed more urgently than ever, according to Business Unity South Africa (Busa), which forms part of B4SA.

The pandemic has placed the country at a crossroads, where prevaricat­ion over policy and reform is no longer an option, said Busa chief executive officer Cas Coovadia.

“The wrong choice takes us toward a failed state,” he said. “The correct choice puts us on to a long, hard road to economic recovery.”

Difference­s extend to the upper echelons of the ANC, which rules in a coalition with the country’s biggest labour federation and the communist party and counts multi-millionair­es and impoverish­ed township residents among its members.

The ANC has formulated six overarchin­g economic plans since taking power after the first multiracia­l elections in 1994, none of which have been fully implemente­d.

While President Cyril Ramaphosa, who took office in February 2018, and his Finance Minister Tito Mboweni have advocated curtailing state debt and pro-business reforms, they’ve faced opposition from a faction loosely coalesced around ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule.

The party wants pension funds and the Reserve Bank to provide infrastruc­ture financing and seeks to start a state-owned bank and pharmaceut­ical company.

Its economic transforma­tion committee proposed that retirement funds take over some of Eskom’s assets, although stopped short of advocating for full-blown privatisat­ion – an option opposed by labour unions.

Skills gap

B4SA is urging the government to fulfil long-standing pledges to make it easier to do business, clamp down on graft and overhaul badly managed state companies.

The group opposes tinkering with the Reserve Bank’s mandate or threats to its independen­ce and dictating to pension funds how to invest.

Lumkile Mondi, an economics lecturer at the University of the Witwatersr­and, said SA lacks the structures for the government and interest groups to genuinely engage about what needs to be done or ensure they stick to their commitment­s.

A lack of skills within the government means there’s no guarantee of follow through on any measures that are agreed, said Peter Attard Montalto, head of capital markets research at Intellidex.

“The implementa­tion architectu­re is lacking,” he said. “The problem now is all the plans will be thrown in the social-compacting mixer and out will come the lowest common denominato­r, without any nod to capacity.”–

 ?? Picture: Bloomberg ?? SLOW GOING. The ANC has formulated six overarchin­g economic plans since taking power in 1994, none of which have been fully implemente­d.
Picture: Bloomberg SLOW GOING. The ANC has formulated six overarchin­g economic plans since taking power in 1994, none of which have been fully implemente­d.

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