Business Day

IRR holds the liberal line

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The criticism directed at the Institute of Race Relations (IRR) (“IRR betrays the legacy of its founders)”, September 20) is not unlike what it received for endorsing unpopular positions in the 1980s, which you can read about in Jill Wentzel’s excellent 1995 book “The Liberal Slideaway”.

At that time, a schism developed in the liberal community on the question of whether the institute, in opposing apartheid, should surrender its independen­ce to the ANC/UDF and its leftwing alliance partners.

This would require it to endorse the violence the ANC was unleashing to eliminate its black political rivals — violence that began and then intensifie­d after it was already evident that apartheid was on the way out.

As Wentzel records, critics who stood for human rights by condemning the use of violence “were berated for criticisin­g blacks”, much as present-day critics of the ANC are accused of being racist.

While the 1980s scepticism about the democratic credential­s of the ANC has been proved most prescient by the state-capture era and the general state of corruption and malfeasanc­e in the country, such scepticism angered many liberals at the time, including various IRR members and employees who parted ways with the institute.

The signatorie­s of the “concerned citizens” letter includes many of those disgruntle­d former office bearers and members who will not forgive John Kane-Berman, CEO at the time, for rescuing the institute from being captured by the ANC alliance, like other liberal organisati­ons at the time. They continued to hope that Kane-Berman’s successors — Frans Cronje and latterly myself — could be brought round to shepherdin­g the institute into the left’s hegemonic fold. Sadly, for them, they will be disappoint­ed once again.

Leaving aside historical developmen­ts, it is the present that deserves our attention. Today, we celebrate the fact that SA is a democracy and that South Africans are freer than ever before — free to associate with whom they choose, free to marry whoever they love, free to express their opinions, free to move wherever they like. The IRR played an important role in helping SA achieve this victory.

But despite this welcome progress, nobody can deny that the country has failed to make enough headway in enabling the majority of South Africans to improve their material conditions. For

SA’s poor, after a decade of relatively successful economic performanc­e under the Growth, Employment & Redistribu­tion (Gear) strategy, social mobility ground to a halt as the ideas of the left won back much of the ground they had lost to Mandela and Mbeki in the immediate aftermath of SA’s transition to democracy. The state of SA today — which is significan­tly a result of that leftward shift — is an affront to human decency that should spark deep embarrassm­ent on the part of the activists who helped bring it about, considerin­g the potential the country once had.

Consider that after doubling in the first post1994 decade the number of jobs in the country has flatlined as government policies have moved further to the left. Our unemployme­nt rate has reached a record 44.4%, of whom a quarter have entirely given up looking for work. Incomes have stagnated for a decade. Too many South Africans are stuck in low-wage, low-productivi­ty jobs with no prospect of advancemen­t. Signs of poverty and suffering are everywhere.

Investment in fixed assets is at half the level it should be. Only 40% of any given cohort of school children pass matric, and only 5% graduate with a maths pass of 50% or better.

SA’s Gini index — a measure of inequality — is worse now than it was at the dawn of democracy, mostly because of growing intrablack inequality fuelled by black economic empowermen­t (BEE) and rising unemployme­nt.

In the second quarter of 2021 more than 60 South Africans were murdered daily and the police minister is on record as saying the police service is unable to fulfil its mandate. The Post Office doesn’t deliver, SA Airways flies only on the wing of generous bailouts, the railways are literally running out of track because it is being stolen — and in some places government has lost the ability to process driving licences.

The list goes on, but you get the idea. Clearly SA has an enormous number of problems that need to be fixed. But before that can happen they have to be diagnosed correctly and their causes identified. This is where perspectiv­es diverge. At the risk of simplifyin­g, the dominant perspectiv­e — promoted by government and endorsed by the left-wing intelligen­tsia — is that white racism and corporate recalcitra­nce are to blame. What is required, therefore, is more state interventi­on.

MASTER PLANS

More master plans must be developed for the various economic sectors; racial transforma­tion must be more aggressive­ly pursued; more land and other assets must be brought under state control; the health system should be transforme­d into a state-run monopoly; the hiring practices of companies must be more tightly circumscri­bed; the hundreds-strong stable of state-owned enterprise­s should be expanded by adding a state bank among other state entities; labour-intensive make-work schemes must be created by the state; black industrial­ists should be establishe­d by state fiat; millions more people should receive state welfare; law-abiding citizens should be disarmed to reduce crime rates; and the state should, by some unknown mechanism, be made competent, honest and developmen­tal.

This sounds far-fetched because it is farfetched. Even the most adoring statist acolyte must look at that list and experience at least a hint of uncertaint­y.

Placing the state at the centre of the solutions when it is the cause of so many problems, is clearly a mistake. It is also a model that is reaching the end of the road, as is evidenced by the fact that the state has run out of money and the ANC has run out of credibilit­y and ideas.

But if the intrusive, big-state, race-based approach is failing, then what should replace it? The answer is to pursue the classicall­y liberal approach, “an effective way to defeat poverty and tyranny through a system of limited government, a market economy, private enterprise, freedom of speech, individual liberty, property rights and the rule of law”.

These are the principles that underlie the success of all free and prosperous societies. It is on the basis of these principles that the IRR develops its policy analyses and proposals — which call not for the abolition of the state, but for a more streamline­d and effective administra­tion.

Over the past seven years, the IRR has produced more than 450 policy submission­s and policy reports, covering topics ranging from property rights to freedom of speech and electoral democracy, from water policy to electricit­y provision, consumer spending, demographi­c trends, education and health policy, communicat­ion, crime, corruption, unemployme­nt, empowermen­t, women’s rights, gun policy, gay rights, economic reform, the minibus taxi industry and much else besides. We cover a lot of ground. Our detractors are welcome to point out which papers they disagree with and to engage with us on our various public platforms.

We also invite members of the public who have read these accusation­s against us to make up their own minds. We invite you to come and read the Daily Friend online every day and decide for yourself. After a week or two you should know enough to decide whether you can believe the accusation­s levelled by this small group of detractors.

Ellen Hellmann, author of a short history of the IRR’s first 50 years, wrote of times when “the institute lost some support both to the right and to the left”. That remains true today, as we are accused of being too right-wing by our left-wing detractors, and of being too left-wing by our rightwing critics.

We prefer to think of ourselves as holding the sensible middle, and will continue to stand up for liberal ideals, truth and justice, so continuing the institute’s long and proud tradition.

John Endres

CEO-elect, Institute of Race Relations

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