The Star Early Edition

Three promises could put us on the high road to success

- MARIUS OOSTHUIZEN

OUR COUNTRY needs a vision – a compelling dream that pulls all of us forward and inspires us to work together for a better future. Right now, South Africa is in a technical recession, when we should be booming at 5% growth and lifting our people out of poverty.

While our politician­s figure out how to convince us to vote for them in 2019, the country waits for leadership. Let’s face it – President Zuma is going to clown around until the end of his term and his opponents are going to tiptoe around the issues, trying not to upset any of the factions that they depend on for a ticket to the Union Buildings. The opposition is going to obsess over possible options for a coalition government, while they miss the moment – that South Africans are yearning for leadership.

So in the absence of any political leadership to speak of, here is a stab at a compelling vision for South Africa. Instead of a 400-page plan such as the National Developmen­t Programme, it’s a three-sentence promise we make to ourselves and one another:

Promise One: Every Child Receives a Quality Education.

Promise Two: Every Young Person has a Job Opportunit­y.

Promise Three: Every Parent can Feed their Family.

Leadership is a rare commodity. Unlike coal or platinum that destroys the environmen­t and pollutes the water when you mine it, true leadership turns everything around it into a resource for the common good. Just imagine if the leaders in our society woke up tomorrow and decided to act the part? Imagine what would happen in every business leader said “I want to do my part in fulfilling the promise of a better South Africa.”

Imagine if every community leader said “Enough is enough, I’m going to insist that this community is worthy of the people who live in it.” Imagine if every faith-community leader said “Not in my name and not under my watch – I will not allow the pillaging of the people’s purse and violation of their hard-won freedom.”

South Africa does not lack leaders. It lacks leadership, because leaders sometimes lack courage. South Africans are waiting around for Zuma to change or Cyril to come and save them or for Jesus to come.

What will it take for every child to receive an education? Political will? A few buildings and toilets? Textbooks being delivered and people doing the job they are paid for? Someone suggested banning all private schools as a way of fixing education. While I think the idea is absurd, the point is well taken, that if the affluent and the powerful had to see their children come home from school without having received a meaningful day’s worth of learning, the system would get fixed almost immediatel­y. Why? Because the people simply wouldn’t take it and would get involved and fix the problem.

What will it take for every young person in South Africa to have a job opportunit­y? A few hundred more farms? A few thousand factories? A few billion dollars or euros invested in infrastruc­ture, road, rail, ports and decent public transporta­tion? What would it take to give every person access to basic healthcare and the means to feed their family? These are things within our reach.

I believe in South Africa and in the ingenuity of South Africans. It would take less than two decades to transform this country. Five years to fix education and get children learning in peace and quiet with some food in their stomachs. Five years to expand our industrial infrastruc­ture and another five to decentrali­se and massively expand our value chains in energy, vehicle component manufactur­ing and a few other high-end manufactur­ing sectors, while we become a call-centre expert on the continent.

A final five years to fundamenta­lly transform our food security system from a small pool of highly consolidat­ed players to a tapestry of localised supply chains to address both the need for jobs and the strategic food security risk we now face.

Just imagine if the meaning of being South African included a commitment to three cardinal things: education for the young, productive employment for the able and a decent meal for every dependant. Surely that’s the right place to start? We would not be reaching for the stars, but we would be laying a foundation on which to build, and we have to start somewhere.

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