The Citizen (KZN)

SA’s economic freedom limited

STUDY: DID NOT INCLUDE IMPACT OF STATE CAPTURE

- Barbara Curson 1. Size of government 2. Judicial independen­ce 3. Sound money 4. Internatio­nal trade 5. Credit market regulation­s 6. Labour market regulation­s 7. Business regulation­s

SA ranks 113 out of 162 in terms of freedom to trade internatio­nally.

To what extent do South Africa’s policies and institutio­ns support economic freedom? According to the 2020 Economic Freedom of the World report recently published by the Fraser Institute (which is based on 2018 data), South Africa climbed up from 101 in 2017 to 90 in 2018 (out of 162 countries).

The study bases economic freedom on personal choice, voluntary exchange, freedom to enter markets and compete, and security of the person and privately-owned property, and includes a measure to gauge the extent to which women have the same economic freedom as men.

It is based on common measuremen­ts and would not include the full impact of a catastroph­ic happening such as state capture.

Hong Kong and Singapore occupy the two top positions of the first quartile (the most-free countries), and Zimbabwe falls within the lowest 10, with Venezuela taking the last spot.

The size of government includes government consumptio­n, subsidies and investment, as well as the top marginal tax rate and state ownership of assets.

An increase in government spending, taxation and the increasing cost of state-owned entities (SOEs) decreases economic freedom. But there is no measuremen­t of wastage, such as the fruitless, wasteful, and irregular expenditur­e by SOEs.

SA ranks 107 out of 162 (2017: 113).

This measuremen­t is based on judicial independen­ce, impartial courts, protection of property rights, military interferen­ce in rule of law and politics, integrity of the legal system, legal enforcemen­t of contracts, regulatory costs of the sale of real property and the reliabilit­y of police.

The protection of persons and their property rights is a fundamenta­l component of economic freedom. SA ranks 54 (2017: 84).

This is based on money growth, standard deviation of inflation, inflation (most recent year) and the freedom to own foreign currency bank accounts.

Thanks to the good governance of the SA Reserve Bank, which managed to ward off state capture, the country’s money growth and control of inflation is controlled well. However, there are still restrictio­ns on investing offshore.

SA ranks 98 (2017: 99).

Freedom to trade internatio­nally is based on tariffs, regulatory trade barriers, non-tariff trade barriers, black-market exchange rates, financial openness, capital controls and the freedom of foreigners to visit.

SA ranks 113 (2017: 96).

These are based on ownership of banks, private sector credit and interest rate controls.

SA ranks 52 (2017: 54).

These are based on hiring regulation­s and minimum wage, hiring and firing regulation­s, centralise­d collective bargaining, work hours regulation­s and mandated cost of worker dismissal.

SA ranks 81 (2017: 78).

These are based on administra­tive requiremen­ts, bureaucrac­y costs, starting a business, impartial public administra­tion, licensing restrictio­ns and cost of tax compliance.

SA ranks 122 (2017: 122).

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck ?? NOT YET UHURU. The country is among the not-so-free – and the index doesn’t take factors such as bailouts or fruitless, wasteful and irregular expenditur­e incurred by SOEs into account.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck NOT YET UHURU. The country is among the not-so-free – and the index doesn’t take factors such as bailouts or fruitless, wasteful and irregular expenditur­e incurred by SOEs into account.

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