Saturday Star

There can be no equality without redistribu­tion

- ISOBEL FRYE

THE only way to understand how South Africa continues to be scarred by such profound inequality is by rememberin­g how long apartheid endured. The finest Constituti­on in the world seems to be of little help, and our militant pre-1994 leadership is now part of the establishm­ent. We are living on borrowed time.

Inequaliti­es erode the stretched social fabric that we committed to building after the defeat of apartheid; the elephant in the room is always the question of redistribu­tion.

South Africa’s redistribu­tive fate was cast in Section 25 – the property clause – of the Constituti­on. Despite a preamble that “recognises the injustices of our past”, South Africa’s founding document did not prioritise the redistribu­tion of apartheid wealth.

Around the same time, the policy principle of “growth through redistribu­tion” in the Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t Programme gave way to the failed Neo-liberal idea of “redistribu­tion through growth”, which characteri­sed the Growth Employment and Redistribu­tion strategy.

Brazil was riddled by similar levels of inequality at the time. But where South Africa liberalise­d its economy, Brazil lifted millions out of poverty through well-targeted redistribu­tive policies under its then president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

South Africa’s resulting failure to redistribu­te led directly to its failure to grow. As monetary policy will tell you, economic growth is a factor in the circulatio­n of money.

Put simply, if 67% of South Africa’s income sits in the hands of 10% of the population – and it does – that money will not circulate as much as it would if it sat in the hands of the remaining 90%.

But if South Africa’s inequality is a function of its economic regression, it has also killed off the country’s middle class. The middle class should have been the driver of growth.

But redistribu­tion in South Africa has happened from the middle classes to the top 10% through low tax burdens on the elite relative to the middle classes, and to the poorest 30% through redistribu­tive social grants. We have killed the golden goose.

And so, according to the 2018 World Inequality Report, while the top 10% of South Africans live very much like their European counterpar­ts, the lot of the bottom 16% of Europeans is comparable to the lot of the bottom 90% of South Africans.

This warped nature of inequality in South Africa has two dominant characteri­stics that speak to our past and should be pillars for immediate corrective policy. The first is that the difference in wages is a greater driver of income inequality than unemployme­nt. The second is that income from wealth contribute­s more to the income of the top 10% than wages.

| African News Agency (ANA)

But despite clear data linking this current accumulati­on to inherited wealth, top incomes are not heavily taxed and wealth persistent­ly escapes grand scrutiny let alone taxation.

The growth of Western democracie­s owes much to the state’s redistribu­tion of surplus and services after World War II. But these functions have weakened since the state’s role was replaced by profiteeri­ng of the private sector in the latter part of the 20th century under the political aegis of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher.

It took the financial crisis in 2008, precipitat­ed by the unchecked greed of globalised financial markets and shareholde­rs, to get mainstream thinkers to rethink the wisdom of letting profits prosper over people. Since then, however, people have begun to follow the money.

Wall Street was occupied and the indecency of money was exposed. Thomas Piketty, the sage of global inequality, was even feted as a prominent guest in South Africa, delivering the annual Nelson Mandela lecture in 2015.

Yet, policymake­rs and politician­s appear to have completely ignored Piketty’s dire warnings for the country’s future.

Instead, the government decided that the best way to raise money in the midst of state capture, under then finance minister Malusi Gigaba, was to raise VAT – a regressive levy that taxes the impoverish­ed at the same rate as the rich – in 2018. The Cabinet accepted this. So did Parliament.

Inequality is unfair and it offends both constituti­onal rights and morality. That must be said, always.

South Africa’s lack of social mobility conjures up then-president Thabo Mbeki’s 2003 descriptio­n of South Africa’s economy as a double-storey house without a staircase. But without a Marxist analysis of the aim of mercantile capitalism and colonial expansion, or of apartheid’s racial capitalism, South Africa’s inequality is not put in its proper context.

Tunisia should be an instructiv­e case for us. Hailed by many, including in the South African government, as the poster child for poverty reduction in the 2000s, reforms in that very unequal country targeted poverty.

But while absolute poverty was reduced, inequality was not. It was the unacceptab­le fact of inequality that eventually led to the toppling of then-president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in the Jasmine Revolution of 2011.

South Africa, similarly overrun with the bleakest inequality anywhere on the planet, has increased taxes on impoverish­ed people while its economic and political elites have supported and sustained each other.

The fundamenta­ls that govern tax policy should also be unpacked, and wealth must be taxed while surplus incomes are taxed more progressiv­ely. The wealth of the country must be shared by all.

Frye is the founding director of the Studies in Poverty and Inequality Institute. This article was first published in New Frame.

 ??  ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS block roads and burn tyres at Quarry Road informal settlement during a community protest in Durban last year.
DEMONSTRAT­ORS block roads and burn tyres at Quarry Road informal settlement during a community protest in Durban last year.

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