The Herald (South Africa)

Government takes SA further into socialist mire

- CHRIS HATTINGH

Reality can be avoided for only so long.

The SA economy has slipped into its first technical recession since 2009.

President Cyril Ramaphosa’s confidence in growth for the economy has proven hollow.

Without a change in the size and the amount of control the state has grasped over the lives of South Africans, without a change in policy from socialism to free markets, this recession was inevitable.

The socialist ideology that permeates the government in the form of higher government spending, increased taxation, barriers to employment, bailouts of state-owned enterprise­s, plans to nationalis­e healthcare (in the form of National Health Insurance, or NHI), and the proposal to amend the constituti­on and jettison property rights has caused this current situation.

Early in August, Ramaphosa made the late-night announceme­nt that the ANC would propose an amendment to the constituti­on empowering the government to expropriat­e private property without compensati­on.

This was a follow-up to parliament’s February resolution that it would undertake an investigat­ion into whether an amendment of this nature was necessary to bring about substantiv­e land reform.

Ramaphosa delivered this announceme­nt despite the countrywid­e public hearings still taking place and that the constituti­onal review committee had yet to announce its findings and recommenda­tions.

Over the second quarter, agricultur­al production dropped by 29.2%.

That is devastatin­g and drags the whole economy down.

There is no reason to improve or invest in your property if you know someone intends to forcefully take it from you.

This huge drop in the agricultur­al sector should, therefore, not come as a surprise, given that the discussion about expropriat­ion without compensati­on, with particular focus on agricultur­al property, has dominated SA’s political discourse in recent months.

If you are looking for a strident example of disregard for constituti­onalism, due process and the rule of law, you need look no further than Ramaphosa’s announceme­nt.

When the president of both the ruling party and the country makes this sort of announceme­nt, you have to either ignore the lessons of history and follow his lead, or try to prepare as best you can for what is going to affect you.

While, for some, that preparatio­n means scaling down, for others it means shipping out. Without property rights, how can we expect those in the agricultur­al sector, who are likely to be the first in line for expropriat­ion, to work as though everything was okay, as though there is no looming tsunami on the horizon?

When politician­s wield as much power as they do in SA, their words have real impact. This recession is theirs to own.

With Ramaphosa’s drive to attract foreign investment, it seems we lost sight of motivating locals by assuring them that staying in SA is worth their time and investment.

Foreign investment will not come if we cannot guarantee property rights for our own people and without property rights, no South African can invest in his future with any certainty whatsoever.

Particular­ly worrying too is the lack of employment.

Once the national minimum wage (NMW) is enacted, yet another barrier to employment will be raised in front of those South Africans who are battling to find work.

Companies are going to hire fewer people because the NMW will make employment more expensive and those they deem unnecessar­y will be let go.

SA’s economy contracted by 0.7% in the three months ended June.

It is a wonder this was not more, given how difficult we make it for new players to enter markets because of onerous regulation­s and barriers to employment.

SAA is unaffordab­le.

The NHI is unaffordab­le. Increased government debt is not sustainabl­e.

State-owned land is idle, dead capital, useful to no one.

The stimulus SA needs is to jettison the unaffordab­le, cut government expenditur­e dramatical­ly and free up state land to the people through allowing them to realise their constituti­onal right to property in the form of title deeds.

To this day, we sit with the legacy of apartheid in the form of government control over our lives.

Black South Africans were denied their property rights under apartheid and now the current government seeks to take us all back to a time before we all believed in a future guarantee by the provisions written into the constituti­on.

The biggest hindrance to economic growth in SA is that the state has too much power and the individual has too little freedom.

To build the grand socialist utopia envisioned in the national democratic revolution, the government will have to spend money.

But the government does not produce money of its own, the only “funds” available to it have to come from the taxpayer.

The more promises are made, the grander the vision, the more the SA taxpayer has to hand over to make it all possible.

But this vision is one that will never be actualised.

Those who are well-off may feel a pinprick or two from inflation and the related higher costs of food and goods, but poorer South Africans will feel hammer blow after hammer blow as their rands lose value, and they can no longer provide for themselves and their families.

Do not entertain any illusions: destructiv­e government policies, which increase state control and diminish individual freedom, affect the poor the most.

The government has added yet more fuel to growing populist sentiments, for example on the radical left.

Enacting socialist policies has the same effect as hitting a wall with a sledgehamm­er.

In SA the cracks have already appeared and they are widening.

Eventually the whole edifice will come crumbling down.

● Chris Hattingh is a researcher at the Free Market Foundation.

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