ANC doesn’t understand economics
In my article Democracy fails to bring development because of the ANC’s disastrous policies
I asked if democracy is a prerequisite for human development
and economic freedom. In this article I
take a retrospective look at South Africa’s economy since 1994.
It’s an article of faith for me, backed by economic evidence,
that the ANC government and left don’t understand the western economic system. Yes, the National Democratic Revolution and
patronage and populism have distracted them.
But I’m convinced SA’s poor economic performance since 1994, while peer
nations reaped the commodities and agriculture booms, is because they lack
economic nous.
There has been a preponderance of communists and unionists
in economic portfolios – Alec Erwin, Rob Davies, Pravin Gordhan, Ebrahim Patel. What do they understand about modern,
industrialised economies? (Doctrinaire SACP
members may dismiss China, which has a capitalist centre, as a sell-out.)
Except for Chris Liebenberg, not one professional economist
or finance specialist occupied the primary economics portfolio – Treasury (see Nhlanhla
Nene and Des van Rooyen below). Trevor
Manuel and Pravin Gordhan were technicians at best, lacking insight for professional
analysis only a specialist can bring to the job.
They’ve had medical doctors in the health minister job –
even the late, oft-inebriated Manto Tshabalala-Msimang knew medicine – but no
economists in inarguably the most important cabinet post bar the president. Doesn’t the ANC think it deserves it? Perhaps this is a good reason why the country
has not performed well economically.
Manuel and Gordhan are not oracles
I don’t understand why business, media and others are so
enamoured of SA’s post-1994 finance ministers.
They hang onto their every word as if they were the Oracle of
Delphi. They are “heroes”, and we should
“go down on our knees and thank them” they say.
In fact, Manuel was
an engineering technician diplomate from his alma mater, Peninsula Technikon (where
I too studied engineering). I’m all for
on-the-job training, but the finance minister job requires specialised, technical
knowledge. Remember his “amorphous
markets” comment that started a run on the rand? After a couple of years in trade and industry
he should have known better. But his
comment revealed how naive and unprepared he was for the portfolio. After this I always thought he was a
dilettante and poseur. His Xhosa bon mots during his budget speeches were
twee and cringe-inducing. His fans in Parliament
and media lapped it up, though.
But today he’s considered the Obi-Wan/Yoda of finance. His rare missives from his redoubt in his
corporate HQ office are pored over by media cognoscenti like nuggets of gold in
the shit that passes for SA’s political economy.
Gordhan is similar.
Nhlanhla Nene was not in the job long enough for me to form an opinion,
but he appeared to be headed in the right direction before he paid the price. The difference between Nene and the other two,
though, is he served an apprenticeship as deputy finance minister, which they
didn’t, and he has an economics degree.
Now, before someone says a minister is the political head of
a department and has a team of specialists, then why the fuss after “unknown
backbencher” Des van Rooyen was appointed in December 2015? He
holds two master’s degrees including a master’s in finance specialising in
economic policy from the University of London.
Academically, he is the most
qualified of the Zuma administration’s finance ministers.
Yes, yes, I know all about the Zupta contagion, but that’s
not my point. Like Manuel and Gordhan,
he too could have learned on the job. In
fact, his academic background may have made him a quicker study than they, but
we shall never know.
I know there are many things at play in the fields of
macroeconomics that determine growth.
But growth is a good indicator of the performance/success of a country’s
economic policy and its chief financial officer, i.e. finance minister.
Post-1994 growth has averaged 3%, half that of SA’s peer
nations’ 5-6%-plus (not including China) for the same period. If we assume 6% is the benchmark for growth,
development and job creation – government’s “achievable” target SA should have
obtained, at least before the 2008 crash – Manuel and Gordhan performed poorly,
far less than 8 or 9 out of 10 the media and DA regularly gave them.
Manuel (and Maria Ramos,
an economist, his director-general) gets credit for steering SA out of
apartheid’s bankruptcy and through a necessary structural adjustment programme,
GEAR. (Typical of government’s confusion, it conflicted with the RDP.) But numerous points are deducted for approving
and defending the arms deal that was the trigger for the subsequent toxic brew
of greed and corruption that has doomed the ANC and almost the country with
it. Today he is still unrepentant. And his lapdogs quote him as the voice of
reason and probity?
Gordhan has muddled along, overseeing public debt that
during his tenure from 2009 to 2014 rose from about 30% GDP to 50%. Points are deducted for failing to do what he
promised – reduce public spending. Under
his watch Nkandla occurred and SAA, SABC and other state enterprises continued
their implosion. He also allowed banks to get away with their cartel-like
practice of near usurious charges, another promise he broke. His
promised firm hand is all talk. And
under his management South Africa is facing possible downgrades.
I wrote before that Gordhan
is not our last hero at the bridge, defending us from economic ruin. In my book his score is a lower than Manuel’s,
pushing him to mediocre. Somehow his
urbaneness and newly acquired status of victimhood (“Leave Gordhan alone!”;
“Let me do my job”) has overshadowed and made some forget his failures. It’s only in SA, where mediocrity is a virtue,
that he’s considered “excellent”.
As a former accountant myself, albeit for a very small
concern, and a lay economics analyst, I think Gordhan (and less so Manuel) has
adequate skills for a bookkeeper, but not the tough and ruthless perseverance a
chief financial officer must have.
I’m not underestimating the impact of party ideology – the ANC’s
obeisance to the Party of the Broad Church and their bible’s commandments, the
National Democratic Revolution – on SA’s growth path. The disastrous evidence is before us.
But if Treasury is hostage to ANC ideology, why has its fan
club in media and business frequently and loudly proclaimed its “independence
must be upheld”? Even I have done
so. Independence from what, though?
The economy’s key failures
I don’t know about them, but my view is Treasury must guide the
economy to growth, development and prosperity based on sound social democratic
and economic principles and not in the manner they have done over the past 20
years. The path has not been pro-growth
and development.
In Africa’s Third
Liberation Greg Mills and Jeffrey Herbst summarise the SA economy’s key
failures:
·
Balance of payments problems due to shrinking
exports and increasing imports, including industrial technology.
·
Low labour productivity despite spending 20% of
budget, or 7% GDP, on education. Due to
protected industries, from 1990 to 2009 productivity rose only 2% while labour
costs almost 6%. Between 2006 and 2009 public
sector wages rose 23% compared to 10% in the private sector.
·
Government spending is crowding out private
investment at a higher rate than comparable developing nations. High public debt is associated with low
growth, and acts as a disinvestment to work and savings.
·
Investment promotion is constrained by political
and economic interests. Included are
unions resisting deregulating the labour market and lowering wages (and wanting
a minimum wage), leading to the lack of job creation.
·
During the commodities boom to 2008, when peer
nations reaped the rewards and grew 5% pa and above, SA’s mining output fell 1% pa, and investment in mining
shrank just under a third between 2003 and 2005. In 2009 mining output was at its lowest level
since 2000.
The result of policy and political failures is a stagnant
economy – a “stalled state” – and lack of jobs.
Essentially the failures are laid equally at the doors of the president
and economic minister of the day.
Economic policy blunders
Here’s a review of some of government’s industrial policy
blunders.
I don’t know if it could have been prohibited, but
government should have discouraged – we know SA’s corporations are very afraid of
defying government – Old Mutual, mining and other companies moving headquarters
to London, despite them having no significant operations abroad. This contributed to the loss of confidence in
the country as an investment destination and devaluation of the rand. Why should foreign companies invest when South
African are leaving? A rookie finance
minister’s (Trevor Manuel) mistake many at the time (including me) thought a
bad idea.
Manuel also approved
Barclays’ majority stake in Absa, Africa’s largest retail bank. This concentrated the banking sector rather
than opening it to competition. (His
wife, Maria Ramos, later became group chief executive of Absa.) Similarly, Walmart should not have been
permitted to buy a majority stake in Massmart.
Now both have regretted their investment, but are having difficulty
divesting their shareholding.
On the basis of antitrust principles and encouraging
competition, Barclays’ and Walmart’s investments should have been permitted on
condition they added diversity, infrastructure and competition and new jobs to
their sectors – the bricks and mortar of investment that’s harder to divest, not
volatile, “hot” money.
Instead, from Walmart government extracted conditions and
R100m for a “supply
chain programme to improve competitiveness in the industry”. The
programme reveals both government’s fatuousness and ignorance of
economics. Both Barclays’ and Walmart’s investments
concentrated their industries and diminished competition. But government believes increasing the number of oligarchies improves competition? Has the programme had any impact, or was it
simply extortion as I thought it was?
Had Walmart wanted to enter SA it could have acquired –
government could have insisted – Massmart’s successful Builder’s Warehouse
chain or a similar, promising green field enterprise. Similarly for Barclays, play the long game of
building the brand from scratch – like successful, fast growing Capitec – rather
than opportunistic, hot money in Absa.
Other blunders include semi-privatising Telkom without
another fixed-line operator in place, or Telkom should have been unbundled, and
selling Iscor outright to Mittal Steel, which turned both into private monopolies
overnight. Once they were privatised
both engaged in unrelenting price-gouging causing huge damage to consumers and
industry. It set back access to
reasonably priced telecommunications and steel for years and economic growth immeasurably.
Fining Telkom
and ArcelorMittal
years later could not undo the damage. Ironically, ArcelorMittal has now sought
government protection from cheap Chinese imports. Allegedly they and government have “learned
their lesson”.
Recently director-general of trade and industry Lionel
October admitted they were “naive” about Mittal.
I read an honours degree in economics. I could call myself an economist but I’m not. I know enough to read the signposts, though. For the advanced international economics
course in 1993 I wrote an essay on competition in oligarchic and monopolistic
economies. Even with some of the technical
material above my head, I understood the limitations and dangers to competition
and growth in an economy that’s not free.
This is standard economic theory, so why did October, whose résumé lists a
master’s in economics from University of London, and his political masters,
not understand it?
It’s not that they’re naive, which is used as a weak defence. Instead, they don’t appear to understand the functioning
of the western economic system and importance of political risk, stable
institutions and a free economy on investor confidence. An example is the ANC’s complaints the
markets – Manuel’s amorphous markets – “overreacted” to Nene’s firing in 2015. This is unsurprising given they are socialist-trained
and leaning apparatchiks who are determined to take SA along the low road of patronage
and low growth.
Big business is complicit
I must make something very clear, though. While government deserves most of the responsibility
for the state of the economy, it’s convenient in some quarters to blame them
for everything that’s gone wrong. But big
business and unions must share a portion of the blame.
South Africa’s economy is small and concentrated, and big
business extracts as much revenue as they can squeeze from it. While there is nothing wrong with an
acceptable rate of return, in SA they are like the commission-seeker or briber who
demands a higher and higher percentage – in our case, from already embattled
consumers – from transactions (e.g. banks, cell phone networks, etc).
In a speech at the University of Witwatersand on 19 July
2016, the IMF’s
David Lipton noted some of the problems that are already known: high
barriers to entry for new entrants, which favour existing companies; few retail
banks and high bank charges; SA companies have high profit margins, often 50
percent higher than in other countries; barriers to entry, protected industries
and labour and protective subsidies harm consumers and competition, and
widespread anti-competitive behaviour in industries.
Collective bargaining serves big business’ and unions’
interest and is a big obstacle to small and medium enterprises – traditional
job creators – that in turn suppresses competition. And apologists for SA’s big business and
their model of almost unfettered capitalism choose to ignore, or excuse, the
fact the questionable and rent-seeking black economic empowerment model is
their creation.
For 20 years big business made huge profits from a protected,
uncompetitive and inefficient economy that was their love-child from a political marriage of convenience with
“naive” and complicit ANC. Now that the happy,
boom years are over and economy is stagnating at near 0% growth, like a delinquent,
estranged spouse, they sit on their cash or invest it abroad, trying to
distance themselves from the gunshot wedding and its bastard.
Rather than be active, responsible citizens, as we all should
be, and take a united
stand against the “toxic combination of disastrous policy, incompetence and
corruption that resulted in declining economic outcomes” they helped create,
big business cowardly and dishonestly hides behind statements like Christo
Wiese’s pretend-ignorance, “As
a businessmen rather than a politician, [I] would like to stay out of politics”.
The failures of the past 22 years indicate the government’s,
left’s and big business’ lack of understanding of a competitive, free economic
system and the requirements essential for growth and development. It’s a result of the ANC’s socialist-cum-nationalist
black empowerment model married to apartheid-era’s over-protected,
uncompetitive corporate/industrial model in which the elite benefit – a
strange, two-headed beast that, yet, feeds off each other. This symbiosis, and ANC-business-unions (pro-growth)
policy stalemate, is why the IMF’s and others’ repeated warnings for complete
structural economic reforms to improve growth and job creation have been
ignored. And so, SA’s development
decline will continue.
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