The Citizen (KZN)

SA’s ‘two great failures’

RISK: CENTRE RELEASES REPORT

- Brian Sokutu brians@citizen.co.za

Think-tank fingers skills lack and policies, such as employment equity.

Poor government policy decisions and a skills mismatch are among key factors to have contribute­d to the downward spiralling of the South African economy, according to this year’s socioecono­mic survey of the Centre for Risk Analysis (CRA).

The state of the economy, public finance, employment, education, industrial relations, health, crime, government, politics, crime and security are among several topics comprehens­ively covered in the 800-page CRA report released yesterday.

In tracking some of SA’s socioecono­mic broad trends from 1994 to the projected 2024, the report identifies key government policy risks, which include:

Government’s continued doubling down on damaging regulation­s in policies, such as the Employment Equity Bill and the draft Companies Amendment Bill;

Poor business sentiment leading to low levels of investment and growth which, in turn, has led to record-high unemployme­nt rates;

A further constraint on household budgets, while South Africa’s middle class is struggling to meet debt obligation­s; and

Lack of jobs having increased a xenophobic sentiment, with protests becoming more violent.

Looking at key economic trends, CRA senior economic analyst Bheki Mahlobo said the ANC administra­tion under President Cyril Ramaphosa continued to perform poorly on the economic front, despite Ramaphosa’s promise to usher in reforms.

SA’s gross domestic product (GDP) performanc­e from 1994 until the projected year of 2024, found that there were two distinct periods that mark performanc­e.

“In the early years of ANC government under presidents Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki, the country saw a substantiv­e economic performanc­e to a point where, from 2004 to 2007, the average GDP growth level in the country reached about 3% to 5% – something comparable to other emerging markets.

“Subsequent to that period, we saw a move away from early pragmatism and market-friendly policies like Gear [growth, employment, and redistribu­tion] to be replaced by hostile policies under former president Jacob Zuma and the Ramaphosa administra­tions.

“This led to a massive contractio­n in the GDP of a negative 6.4% for the year 2020,” the report says.

“South Africa lacked a skilled workforce to be absorbed in specialise­d employment,” the analyst said.

“These sectors require highly skilled individual­s but our education system does not properly equip individual­s with such skills,” said Mahlobo.

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