Daily Maverick

Paralysis, apathy, somnambuli­sm: will the government just act now?

Inconsiste­nt applicatio­n of economic policy has long been a constraint to growth in SA. As politician­s manipulate citizens and unemployme­nt rises, the policy debate is becoming more polarising. But sometimes it’s not about the policy. Get the basics right

- Load shedding turns 14 Master your medical scheme’s PMBs Sasha Planting

It is a cliché, but South Africa is a country of massive opportunit­y. With vast mineral wealth, natural beauty and a youthful population, her resources are there to be carefully exploited and managed for the benefit of all.

Yet the reverse is happening. In front of our very eyes, and at an accelerati­ng pace, the infrastruc­ture that is required not just to maintain but also to grow South Africa’s economy is collapsing or has already collapsed.

To run a functionin­g economy, a few basics are required: the lights need to be on, water needs to flow, people need to be able to get to work, and goods need to be delivered. This is not happening, regardless of policy.

The situation is most dire at a basic infrastruc­ture level. Municipali­ties, responsibl­e for the provision of basic services to citizens – water, sanitation, housing and power – are utterly broken. In its State of the Government report submitted to Cabinet in August, the Department of Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs categorise­d just 16 out of 257 municipali­ties in SA as “stable”. Raw sewage runs through the streets of townships and into rivers, polluting waterways and spreading disease. Streetligh­ts don’t work, enabling criminals, and streets are disintegra­ting, congesting traffic and adding to vehicle maintenanc­e costs.

Yet service delivery at this most basic level is vital if South Africa wants to broaden economic participat­ion and reverse its unemployme­nt trend, says the Bureau for Economic Research in a recent report on the state of SA’s municipali­ties. “To achieve these objectives, it is necessary to strengthen municipal finances and investment, with merit-based appointmen­ts and good municipal governance as a prerequisi­te.”

It is not just communitie­s that suffer, but businesses too. In April 2021, poultry producer Astral Foods obtained an order from the high court against the Lekwa Municipali­ty in Mpumalanga for its failure to provide basic service delivery in line with its constituti­onal obligation­s, and in June Clover announced it was relocating its Lichtenbur­g factory to Durban because the Ditsobotla Municipali­ty could not deliver basic services.

This raises the cost of doing business and leads directly to job losses.

It is not just the municipali­ties that are broken; South Africa’s utilities are too. Eskom, which supplies 95% of South Africa’s power, has implemente­d stage 4 load shedding, despite its best efforts to keep the lights on. As Daily Maverick’s Ferial Haffajee pointed out this week, in Johannesbu­rg alone there are 421 power cuts a day. And yet the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy cannot fully release the handbrake holding back the developmen­t of a vibrant renewable energy sector whose economic multiplier­s are orders of magnitude more than those of the fossil-fuel economy. This is something that even Eskom supports.

Many of the 13 state-owned Water Boards that manage the country’s water supply and sanitation, including Amatola, Sedibeng, Lepelle, Magalies and Umgeni, are completely dysfunctio­nal, largely thanks to the overt influence of politics and politician­s who seem to have forgotten that access to potable water is a basic human right. The Amatola Water Board is so inept it cannot kick-start a project that is 94% complete, and in so doing avert Day Zero in the Nelson Mandela Bay (NMB) Metro. Trying to persuade companies to invest in NMB is impossible under these circumstan­ces. It is an opportunit­y missed given the post-lockdown trend that is seeing people and businesses relocate to smaller urban centres.

Passenger and freight rail services are in disarray. Investor Warren Buffett was once asked which economic indicator he would choose if he had to rely on just one set of economic statistics. He picked freight rail traffic. Imagine what he would say if he knew there were just two container trains a day, running in each direction, between Durban and Johannesbu­rg. That’s four trains. On South Africa’s busiest freight corridor.

“What we move is the economy. It’s the tangible economy,” Ian Jefferies, CEO of the Associatio­n of American Railroads, once said.

“And so as the economy goes, rail goes. So when rail is doing well, it usually means the economy is running pretty strong.”

For moving people efficientl­y and cost-effectivel­y, rail can’t be beaten. Yet there are no longer trains running between Johannesbu­rg and Pretoria, or between Johannesbu­rg and Krugersdor­p, and just two a day, each way, between Soweto and Johannesbu­rg. Transnet reported that in one week (8 to 15 October 2021) 30,983km of cable were stolen in 112 separate incidents.

Passenger rail is irreparabl­y broken, and soon freight will be too.

As for telecommun­ications, which is unquestion­ably an economic enabler, the picture is better, but not great. A 2018 study by Pew Research Center puts mobile access penetratio­n in South Africa at 95% and smartphone penetratio­n at 91.2%.

However, high data costs continue to hamstring use. New spectrum resources have not been issued for more than 15 years, for which much blame can be laid at the feet of former communicat­ions ministers who have bungled the process, costing South Africa’s economy dearly. “Delays in allocating spectrum for the roll-out of 5G wireless broadband in SA also mean delays in reaping massive benefits,” says Arthur Goldstuck, CEO of World Wide Worx.

There has been a lot of hype about 5G networks and their potential to enable the Fourth Industrial Revolution, and it’s well deserved. With faster data speeds and other tech benefits, 5G will become a foundation for innovation, transformi­ng many sectors of our economy – starting with health and education – and creating industries not imagined today. Falling behind in this regard has long-lasting economic implicatio­ns for SA.

Regarding national government department­s, delivery failures read like a litany, but it becomes more alarming when they fail to get even the small things right: Home Affairs, for instance, is still reviewing SA’s work permit system and critical skills list for foreigners. This is despite a list of critical skills being published for comment in February this year.

In recent weeks Statistics South Africa has twice delayed the publicatio­n of economic data because the relevant department­s have been unable to pass on what should be routine data. In the case of the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy, it was mining data used in the calculatio­n of GDP growth; and in the case of the Justice Department it was stats on civil cases for debt, a key indicator of consumer and small-business health.

So yes, we can debate austerity, and the basic income grant, and how to enable the just transition, but what we need is growth. And enabling growth is not difficult – get the basics of service delivery right, for a start. After that, we can talk.

When it comes to moving

people efficientl­y and cost-effectivel­y, rail can’t be beaten. Yet there are no longer trains running between Johannesbu­rg and Pretoria, or between Johannesbu­rg and

Krugersdor­p

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