Business Day

Ditch outdated rules to help us survive a winter of discontent

- Jasson Urbach Urbach is a director of the Free Market Foundation of Southern Africa. ●

As the coronaviru­s continues to wreak havoc across the globe, SA inches closer to winter and the future looks bleak. There can be no good outcomes from here — the country faces a long winter of discontent.

This is a human tragedy of epic proportion­s, and an economic one too. Our only hope is to soften the blow by suppressin­g the disease and adopting proven economic policies that can rebuild the country and create the conditions for strong economic growth.

The SA economy has been in a deep, dark hole for several years. Before the coronaviru­s struck the economic forecast was woeful. SA is now firmly in an economic calamity.

Even if the measures to slow the spread of the virus prove successful in the short run, South Africans must be prepared for subsequent outbreaks of the disease, which will further dampen economic activity and retard economic recovery. The SA Reserve Bank’s “hail Mary” 100-basis-point rate cut was the proverbial Band-Aid on a patient with a chronic heart condition who has just lost a limb. It will do little to reduce the need for immediate action or alter the underlying economic meltdown. The government ran out of fiscal space years ago thanks to its commitment to implement failed socialist policies.

The harm is compounded by fiscal mismanagem­ent and overspendi­ng on a bloated state.

It is scandalous that the government continues to bail out and subsidise stateowned entities that compete directly with private enterprise­s and consume billions of rand in taxpayer resources. This money could be used to directly assist the poor. It could purchase health-care services and products for them from privately competing companies to assist with the inevitable fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

To assist patients in need of pharmaceut­ical drugs, the government should urgently repeal the single-exit price mechanism, which applies to all medicines supplied to the private health-care sector. The single-exit price compels all manufactur­ers and importers to sell their products at the same price to all of their private sector customers, regardless of the size of the order. It also prohibits them from offering any discounts to private customers. Most worrying is that no pharmaceut­ical company may donate medicine to the private sector or sell medicine to a private company at a reduced price.

To increase access to desperatel­y needed medicines the government must allow private organisati­ons and charities to negotiate directly with pharmaceut­ical companies to obtain the required drugs at discounted prices.

The government should also urgently repeal VAT on pharmaceut­ical products and devices. If the objective is to have a healthy and productive population, it makes no sense to levy a highly regressive tax on medical supplies the purpose of which is purely to raise government revenue. VAT on medical supplies directly penalises the sickest and most vulnerable citizens.

Some large businesses will be able to cope in the short run without revenue, but small and medium-sized firms will not. The government should increase the corporate tax exemption threshold for these enterprise­s and allow them to temporaril­y stop their Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund payments to stem the jobs bloodbath and continue their operations. These are the enterprise­s that will, if allowed to, hire the largest percentage of the workforce in future.

TO ASSIST PATIENTS IN NEED OF PHARMACEUT­ICALS, THE GOVERNMENT SHOULD URGENTLY REPEAL THE SINGLE-EXIT PRICE MECHANISM

The government should immediatel­y put a stop to the extension of bargaining council agreements to third parties, to enable labourinte­nsive small firms to continue their operations.

Bargaining council agreements are generally entered into between big business and big unions, which agree to set terms of employment that are acceptable to them but that are often too onerous for small businesses and their employees. Small firms and their employees are not represente­d on bargaining councils and have no say at such meetings, yet with the support of big government they have the decisions of the bargaining councils imposed on them. Stopping the extension of bargaining council agreements to third parties will not disrupt the terms of the bargaining council agreement. If the government wants to address rising unemployme­nt, it must amend the law now.

Covid-19 is a huge challenge to the whole world, but we are already seeing many countries discard outdated and damaging rules and regulation­s to cope with the crisis. SA should not miss the opportunit­y to do the same.

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