Financial Mail

RWANDA LEAVING SA BEHIND

- @Sikonathim mantshants­has@fm.co.za by Sikonathi Mantshants­ha

This week the tiny central African nation of Rwanda is holding memorial events to mark 25 years since the slaughter of almost a million of its people. By their compatriot­s! This month SA marks a quarter century since the end of apartheid and the birth of democracy. Both countries emerged from brutal, tragic pasts. The similariti­es end about there. The fortunes of SA and Rwanda have since diverged. Leadership is the defining feature.

The people of SA must accept responsibi­lity for the post-1994 chaos. We chose Jacob Zuma, Bathabile Dlamini, Nomvula Mokonyane and Julius Malema as our leaders.

Rwandans, on the other hand, did not have much of a choice in who their leader would be after the genocide. But, if the past 25 years are anything to go by, Rwandans have won by having Paul Kagame as their leader. From the ashes of the genocide, a tiny nation has made great strides in human developmen­t. Kagame has turned out to be a dictator, but a benevolent one.

In the past 25 years Rwanda has achieved more than any other African country. Today Rwanda is a beacon of stability in a very rough neighbourh­ood.

From a low base, the economy has raced ahead at 6.1% a year in the past seven years, according to the World Bank. That is lower than the 10-year average 8.4% and 7.3% growth achieved in the years to 2000 and 2010. This year Rwanda is chasing growth of 7.8%.

Gross national income (GNI) a person has tripled, from $620 in 2000 to $1,990 two years ago.

While a lot has been achieved over the same period in SA, a lot has also gone wrong. After rising steadily through the 1990s, GDP growth hit a high of just over 5% a year in 2007. At 0.8% last year, SA’S economy is dwarfed by population growth of 1.3%. GNI per capita has dropped from $6,150 in 2010 to $5,430 in 2017. Of

course, those who want to paint a picture of progress will point out, correctly, that GNI stood at $3,020 in the year 2000 and at $3,280 in 1990.

Rwanda’s progress is the result of its government’s determinat­ion to ensure the place becomes a magnet for investment. Kagame tolerates no corruption or other crime. His government regularly intervenes in neighbouri­ng states to neutralise threats to Rwandan stability. Down here, we not only tolerate instabilit­y coming through our borders, our government actually protects the despots manufactur­ing it in Harare.

Suffering by comparison

In other measures, too, Rwanda is outpacing SA. You need 45 days to start a business in SA; in Rwanda it is four days. Rwanda’s birth rate among women aged 1519 has dropped to 27 births per 1,000 women in 2017, from 63 per 1,000 women in 1990. In SA 44 out of 1,000 women of the same age gave birth in 2017.

Life expectancy has increased to 67 years in Rwanda while a person born in SA in 2017 can expect to live to 63. In Kigali, the Rwandan capital, some years ago I was able to walk alone in the streets at midnight, and came across other pedestrian­s walking solo. Unhurried. In Joburg, doing so even during the day is rapidly becoming an extreme sport. Certainly, living in Joburg is more dangerous than living in conflict zones such as the Palestinia­n territory of the Gaza Strip and the Israeli town Sderot across the barrier.

Yet in 1994, SA held more promise, considerin­g the natural resources it is blessed with, compared to the nothingnes­s of Rwanda. It turns out that leadership, not resources in the ground, makes all the difference.

Under Kagame’s dictatorsh­ip, Rwanda is on course to become a middle-income country in 10 years’ time. SA, on the other hand, will still be looking to the likes of David Mabuza and Ace Magashule to visit more ruin upon the nation.

It turns out that leadership, not resources in the ground, makes all the difference

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