Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Leaning close to uninvestab­le

A deep political crisis looms for SA, writes Terence Corrigan

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SOUTH Africa is witnessing today what will be remembered as one of the turning points in its history. These do not come often. Over the past two weeks, South Africa’s ruling party and government have pushed aggressive­ly ahead with plans to embark on a programme of expropriat­ion without compensati­on (EWC).

President Cyril Ramaphosa made a late-night announceme­nt decreeing his party would be amending the Bill of Rights to provide “clarity” on the constituti­onal framework governing EWC – although stating in the same breath the Constituti­on already permitted it. He did this as leader of a political party, dodging whatever responsibi­lities he carries as the head of a constituti­onal republic.

The national executive committee of the ANC said it would instruct its people in the state to begin undertakin­g compensati­onfree seizures of property. (For the leadership of a political party to presume to issue such instructio­ns was itself a grave abuse of the Constituti­on.)

It was also reported the ANC’s leadership was concerned that – having made the decision to amend the Constituti­on – it might lack a mandate for EWC, since a majority of the hundreds of thousands of written submission­s that the official “consultati­on” process had yielded came out clearly against it.

The solution put forward was to reopen the process, and mobilise its members to deliver a suitable outcome. This would so obviously rubbish the integrity of the parliament­ary process that it was rejected by the head of the committee, who is himself a member of the ANC.

To push EWC forward, an initial list of 139 properties to be targeted for confiscati­on was compiled. It’s not clear who issued the instructio­ns for this to be done. The list – or at least a version of it, which, despite government disavowals appears to be genuine, and actually contains around 190 entries – was leaked over the past weekend. It appears that at least some of these are high-value, productive properties. EWC will not, it seems, be confined to dealing with issues at the periphery of South Africa’s economy – the abandoned buildings and vacant plots of land – but is apparently intended to intrude into its productive heart.

Less remarked upon was an address by the ANC’s secretary- general which – while paying homage to Cuba and Venezuela and quoting “Comrade” Vladimir Lenin with effusive approval – lauded communism as “the highest form of human society”.

Meanwhile, Stats SA released data that put the official jobless rate at 27.2%. In response, Ramaphosa – as party head, one understand­s – announced a stimulus package for the economy. Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene estimated this would cost R48 billion.

The Sunday Times reported the government was committed to bailing out the country’s stateowned enterprise­s to the tune of around R59bn. It’s not clear where the money for this will come from, with GDP growth projected by the South African Reserve Bank at a meagre 1.2% for this year, and with the JSE showing a worrying outflow of funds this year.

It’s as well to remember the government was forced to raise

VAT earlier this year in order to do something to fill the growing revenue hole.

And it should have come as no surprise the rand took a serious knock over the past week – reaching R15.41 to the dollar in the early hours of Monday – though recovering some ground thereafter. On Friday, it was at R14.09. On 1 August, it was at R13.22, and six months ago, it was at around R11.71. Certainly, concerns around other emerging markets – notably Turkey – have played a role.

But the decline of the rand tells the story of South Africa’s failure to address its own vulnerabil­ities, notably its failure to attract the foreign direct investment it so desperatel­y needs. It is naïve to imagine EWC will do anything other than compound these problems. For EWC undermines the most basic guarantee that any investor or property holder needs – the security of the investment.

We at the Institute of Race Relations have engaged with numerous businesspe­ople, both South Africans and foreigners, who have marked EWC as their most pressing concern. The sense that South Africa is increasing­ly “uninvestab­le” is gaining hold.

Indeed, there is little to suggest much priority is being given at present to the impact it will have on the economy (whatever assurances were made in the past). Much of the rhetoric that has accompanie­d this process leaves the impression of a government determined to undertake a policy animated more by ideology than by a sober calculatio­n of its outcomes.

This is a moment in which the choices made will be crucial to South Africa’s future. At present, the direction is clear: an economic malaise is to be tackled by deepening a political crisis.

And the integrity of South Africa’s Constituti­on and institutio­ns will be collateral damage.

Corrigan is a project manager at the Institute of Race Relations (IRR), a think tank that promotes political and economic freedom.

 ?? PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA ?? Hundreds of Capetonian­s attended one of the public hearings on expropriat­ion without compensati­on, which were held at the Friends of God Church in Goodwood.
PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA Hundreds of Capetonian­s attended one of the public hearings on expropriat­ion without compensati­on, which were held at the Friends of God Church in Goodwood.

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