Business Day

The tests ahead of us for a sustainabl­e recovery

- BUSI MAVUSO ● Mavuso is CEO of Business Leadership SA.

Idon’t know about you, but it didn’t feel as if there was any break between 2020 and 2021 — it just seemed to be a continuati­on of our struggles with the Covid-19 pandemic as it grew deadlier during its second wave. We can only brace ourselves for what may emerge in a third wave that many experts are pencilling in for June or July.

But despite the depressed state in which we opened the year, economic data has surprised on the upside. It does seem that our economic rebound from the worst contractio­n in a century looks to be on track despite a first quarter marked by the reintroduc­tion of tighter, but pleasingly more targeted lockdown restrictio­ns and Eskom load-shedding.

Stats SA conducted online surveys in 2020 to gauge the effect of the pandemic on businesses as well as employment and incomerela­ted issues. It found that jobs and businesses that survived in 2020 are likely do so this year too.

The findings are welcome when you consider the unpreceden­ted rate of job losses in SA over the past year, as the official unemployme­nt rate reached 32.5%. Almost 1.4-million fewer people were employed in the final three months of 2020 than in the same period in 2019.

To ensure the jobs bloodbath is halted and that we don’t have even more businesses collapsing in the months to come, the state has to deliver as quickly as possible on a vaccinatio­n programme for 42-million people.

This has already been delayed because of, among other things, question marks over the efficacy of the AstraZenec­a vaccine. Should this endeavour fail, the administra­tion of President Cyril Ramaphosa risks losing the confidence of all spheres of society.

Health minister Zweli Mkhize says the country has managed to secure a combined 51-million vaccine doses, with 31-million coming from Johnson & Johnson and 20-million from Pfizer.

The country also expects about 1.2-million vaccines from Covid-19 Vaccines Global Access, Covax.

These agreements are positive steps and are enough for us to now run full steam ahead with accelerati­ng the rollout across the country, hopefully finally breaking the strangleho­ld the pandemic has had on us since March 2020.

The middle of May has been projected as the start of the second phase of the vaccinatio­n programme, when essential workers, people over 60 years old and people older than 18 with co-morbiditie­s will get prioritise­d. It’s a monumental challenge and as business we hope the state uses privatesec­tor resources and expertise in dispersing the vaccines.

In years past such partnershi­ps would prove near impossible, but there are positive examples upon which we can now build to ensure the success of the next two phases of the rollout. The ministeria­l expectatio­n is that the next phase will take as long as six months, ending in October.

Private-sector partnershi­ps in disbursing the vaccines will be important in meeting the deadlines, with medical aid company Discovery saying it has the capacity to vaccinate 50,000 people a day and Bonitas Medical Fund saying it can vaccinate as many as 150,000 a day.

While the vaccinatio­n programme, in my mind, is the most immediate, pressing issue for our economic recovery, there is another critical risk to a sustainabl­e economic recovery: shortages of reliable supplies of energy.

It is unlikely that Eskom will alleviate load-shedding from the third quarter of this year, despite the best efforts of André de Ruyter and his executive team to tackle historic issues.

Here Operation Vulindlela, which operates within the presidency in partnershi­p with National Treasury to accelerate critical reforms, will be critical in speeding up the reform of our electricit­y markets.

It aims to help reduce the institutio­nal inefficien­cy, red tape and poor policy design that have often plagued all attempts at reform in this space. Eskom’s energy shortages over the past 13 years have weighed on the economy’s ability to expand and have contribute­d to job losses as well.

We have welcomed the action taken to ensure that increased electricit­y capacity is produced through independen­t power producers, but it won’t be enough to plug a 4MW-5GW supply gap through to 2022.

The policy space to plug this gap will be closely monitored as it will shape confidence in the economy after the pandemic.

The first quarter has certainly flown by and has served to reduce anxieties among us all, but much work lies ahead for both the government and business to cement our economic rebound and ensure a sustainabl­e recovery.

The vaccine is our most critical test, with the World Bank saying our entire recovery depends on the programme. We all need to pull together.

THE VACCINE IS OUR MOST CRITICAL TEST, WITH THE WORLD BANK SAYING OUR ENTIRE RECOVERY DEPENDS ON THE PROGRAMME

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