Saturday Star

EED would work better than BEE

The reality is that disadvanta­ge, not colour of skin, is keeping millions of South Africans from participat­ing in the economy

- MICHAEL MORRIS

THE MOST dramatic and effective strategy available to South Africa to overcome the lasting effects of a deep history of racial inequity is, ironically, one that faces the most resistance.

Outrage and incredulit­y invariably greet the suggestion that the real answer lies in abandoning race itself, as skin colour is only a deceptive indicator of appearance­s, and using it to mean anything else is as specious as it is intrinsica­lly racist.

How, detractors ask, can South Africa possibly undo the effects of disempower­ment, dispossess­ion and deprivatio­n exacted by race alone without identifyin­g the victims, and delivering the redress, by race?

The liberal view – which the Institute of Race Relations (IRR) cleaves to as a matter of principled conviction – is that society is made up of individual­s whose worth is not reducible to or definable by any other attribute than what is uniquely innate to them.

If people choose to define themselves by race, it is their right to do so, but this is a choice no one else has the right to make for them.

It follows that the IRR rejects transforma­tion or empowermen­t based on race. But if that cheers liberal hearts, what does it really mean when we confront, as we must, the real, lingering disadvanta­ges in our society, and which conform broadly to race?

It is, in fact, much less of a conundrum than it may seem. Proceeding from its principled position – coupled with the certainty that if South Africa is to prosper the disadvanta­ge deficit inherited from apartheid and compounded by the failure sufficient­ly to overcome it since 1994 – the IRR has crafted a detailed alternativ­e which we believe will be at once much more effective and fair, and can, at the same time, defeat the damaging mythology of race.

Our policy of Economic Empowermen­t for the Disadvanta­ged (EED) – which has been mentioned recently in the coverage of the DA’S grappling with alternativ­es to the ANC’S race-based Black Economic Empowermen­t (BEE) model – focuses unambiguou­sly on the reality of a country and a society profoundly weakened by disadvanta­ges which continue to burden the majority of the population. By some measures, the burden has actually increased since 1994.

But instead of intervenin­g on a racial basis – as BEE does, too often enriching only a small politicall­y connected elite but failing on any meaningful scale to help the poor and the jobless – EED proposes dealing directly with disadvanta­ge itself.

The effect, in racial terms, would hardly differ from the intended noble objective of BEE. We have argued repeatedly that the primary beneficiar­ies of a genuine empowermen­t will be black people, since they make up the greater proportion­s of the poor, the jobless and the hopeless for whom BEE has indeed been what we unrepentan­tly call “a dismal failure”.

South Africa’s unaddresse­d disadvanta­ges (after nearly 25 years of race-based transforma­tion) are stark in the data.

Of the 9.3 million unemployed South Africans, 6 million are under 35, and 8.3 million are black. The black unemployme­nt rate is as much as 4 to 5 times higher than that of the white rate.

In an economy in which jobs are shifting inexorably towards highskills sectors, it is sobering that the labour market absorption rate is 75.6% for those with a degree, falling to 50.3% for those with matric, and just 34%, on average, for those with anything less.

Education is the key, here. But the scale of disempower­ment is staggering; just under half of children – most of them black – who enrol in Grade 1 will make it to Grade 12 and only 28% of people aged 20 or older have completed high school.

These figures illustrate the real divide, and the real task of empowermen­t.

Under EED, instead of numerical racial targets, the focus would be on doing the things that would improve the lives of poorer people; four “Es” – rapid economic growth, excellent education, more employment, and the promotion of vibrant and successful entreprene­urship.

An integral part of EED would be a system of government-funded vouchers available to all means-tested South Africans earning below a certain amount, which they could use to access education, health care, and housing of their choice, giving lower income families options many middle class people take for granted.

Under an EED policy, the current BEE scorecard would be replaced by one that would reward businesses for the investment­s they make, the profits they generate, the jobs they sustain or create, the goods and services they buy from other suppliers, the innovation they help to foster, entering into effective public-private partnershi­ps to improve education, health care, and housing and maintainin­g and expanding essential infrastruc­ture, as well as the contributi­ons they make to tax revenues, export earnings, and foreign currency inflows.

They would also score by topping up employees’ vouchers.

The inescapabl­e reality is that disadvanta­ge, not race, locks millions out of the economy, the ranks of the middle class – where most South Africans want to be – and the better life they have hoped for since 1994.

Black people in these categories deserve having their disadvanta­ges removed, and their “race” is not the problem.

● Morris is head of media at the Institute of Race Relations

 ?? PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA PICTURE: EPA/NIC BOTHMA ?? Shahied Robain, a shack dweller from Bo-kaap in Cape Town, is one of South Africans living on the breadline. An unemployed man asks for help at a traffic intersecti­on in Cape Town. Lack of jobs is one of the major issues facing the country.
PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA PICTURE: EPA/NIC BOTHMA Shahied Robain, a shack dweller from Bo-kaap in Cape Town, is one of South Africans living on the breadline. An unemployed man asks for help at a traffic intersecti­on in Cape Town. Lack of jobs is one of the major issues facing the country.

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