Sunday Tribune

Why WEF flies above our heads

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- Victor Kgomoeswan­a

ENGLISH poet from the Romantic Age, William Blake, lived by the maxim: “I must create a system or be dominated by another man’s”. Rather than criticisin­g what others were doing, which gave it more credence, he would concentrat­e his resources on the business of creation.

These words rang in my head during a radio discussion on the 27th edition of the World Economic Forum Africa (WEFA) in Durban this week.

Many callers bemoaned the failure or inability of the discussion­s like those at WEFA to “trickle down to the people on the ground”.

Why would the rulers of the world waste their time at any World Economic Forum (WEF) session, regional or in Davos, on the masses, let alone African masses?

The WEF was created in 1971 to control the world. Its stated purpose was to improve the “state of the world by engaging business, political, academic, and other leaders of society to shape global, regional, and industry agendas”.

Since then, membership of the forum predominan­tly comprises business empires with billions of dollars in revenues – hardly the champions of the poor Africans masses. Membership of this exclusive club costs more about $20 000 for individual­s and more than $600 000 for what is called a strategic partner.

Hardly a recipe for mass participat­ion. If we want any benefit “trickling down to us”, we must do it ourselves.

Protesting at every WEF session will not get any substantiv­e results, either. In Durban, while the demonstrat­ors in the streets highlighte­d the perennial income inequality, the delegates were ensconced in the air-conditione­d meeting rooms of the Internatio­nal Convention Centre.

Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba toiled to explain that elusive phenomenon: radical economic transforma­tion (RET). He conceded that we could (more like should) have done more to make our economy inclusive. Why did we not, since 1994?

Back to Blake, the system we used was not our own creation. We opted to pacify internatio­nal investors, their proxies in credit rating agencies and the Bretton Woods institutio­ns, for example the World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

In the name of free market policies, these institutio­ns forcefed us such anti-poor hobbies like privatisat­ion, fiscal austerity, free trade and deregulati­on.

To comply, we relaxed exchange controls – and some of the old money fled the country. We sold off or compromise­d our state-owned enterprise­s, rushed into internatio­nal trade arrangemen­ts, crippling our textile production capability and creating space for American chicken to be dumped on our limping poultry industry.

We chastise our workers when they ask for a living wage. Instead of prioritisi­ng and incentivis­ing intra-africa trade, African countries concluded divisive economic partnershi­p agreements with European trading partners. We gave our Brics partners almost unfettered access to our natural resources.

In return, we were rewarded with excellent global competitiv­eness rankings or the promise of a good sovereign credit rating, if not threatened with a downgrade, to keep us in line.

When our masses complained that they were not experienci­ng the fruits of our political freedom, we labelled them ungrateful instead of thanking us for ending apartheid or colonial subjugatio­n.

We applauded ourselves for glossy economic growth figures and celebrated the number of South Africans receiving social grants, while neglecting education.

We adopted one policy after another. RDP morphed into Gear, then Asgisa, then the NDP. Affirmativ­e action evolved into BEE, which mutated into BBBEE and now RET. All these policies remain the dictates of others, or simply shrivel and die, still craving implementa­tion or execution. In short, we continued to allow others to write our script. We put our best foot forward when going to WEF in Davos, rather than when we address a group of civilians participat­ing in a service delivery protest; we dismiss such people as puppets of somebody else’s political agenda.

So let us not be surprised when WEFA flies above the heads and hearts of most of our people. It shall stay that way until we fashion our own forum and follow through on our excellent policies.

• Kgomoeswan­a is the author of Africa is Open for Business; media commentato­r and public speaker on African business affairs, and a weekly columnist for African Independen­t – Twitter Handle: @Victorafri­ca

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 ??  ?? Civil society, political parties and church leaders under the banner of the Freedom Movement protest against President Jacob Zuma in Pretoria on April 27, Freedom Day. The writer says protests won’t stop until there’s economic justice.
Civil society, political parties and church leaders under the banner of the Freedom Movement protest against President Jacob Zuma in Pretoria on April 27, Freedom Day. The writer says protests won’t stop until there’s economic justice.

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