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Showing posts from February, 2025

Densification not the solution to Cape Town's housing crisis

Australia has a housing crisis caused by decades-old bad policy. Among them was tax breaks for developers to build housing for investment purposes. Now housing, including rentals for tiny units, are unaffordable to many. Demand far exceeds supply. Cape Town has a housing problem which its developer-friendly policy exacerbates. Housing here is the most expensive in the country, pressured by foreign buyers, in-migration, Airbnb and digital nomads. A modest two-bedroom flat in a mid-tier suburb starts from R800,000, not even mentioning rents. The city's policy is to sell available land at a discount presuming developers would build "affordable housing [sic]" - monthly income under R29,000 (Groundup). This is middle income - these people can buy or rent on the open market. The first problem is the land will not be auctioned, a process where the highest bid wins. Do they accept the lowest offer? The other flaw is discounting land does not necessarily lead to genuinely affordab...

Expropriation Act - correcting past injustices or ANC's toxic legacy?

Columnist William Saunderson-Meyer writing this weekend (again) about Donald Trump's executive order suspending aid to South Africa and offering minorities refugee status. "One would have hoped that the blizzard of bad news would trigger just a modicum of introspection in the South African body politic. Alas, it seems not. There ensued a swooning media narrative depicting a plucky Ramaphosa dishing it out to that thuggish US lout kicking sand in our faces. Ramaphoria —the uncritical media-fuelled adoration of the president that characterised the early years of Ramaphosa’s first term but gradually waned in response to his inability to match inspiring speech with action — is definitely back in favour." (Note: in the early Ramaphosa presidency, Saunderson-Meyer too was a Ramaphoria, as was most of SA's elite.) "While there were bitterly few dispassionate journalistic assessments to be found, there was plenty of mockery by columnists and cartoonists of Afrikaners and...

Ramaphosa is no hero to save South Africa from bullies

US president Donald Trump threw the cat among the pigeons last week with his social media post South Africa was doing "bad things" to minorities and taking their land away (untrue, for now) and he was suspending aid. This was primarily about the Expropriation Act. SA's government and media, which frequently acts as a mouthpiece for the ANC, Daily Maverick's Stephen Grootes for example, wrote the Expropriation Act was fading from politics until Trump's statements. False. It's been in the public's subconscious since the ANC and Ramaphosa capitulated to the EFF's demand. If it was no longer headline news, why do the DA and others say they will test its constitutionality in court? Referring to taking a tough stand against Trump. Grootes wrote Ramaphosa can, when necessary, be forceful. I suppose given an opportunity anyone can show a different side. But political aggression is not him. There's no disputing he's a supine, weak and ineffectual leader...

Trump versus South Africa's leftwing

 The South African establishment - ANC, DA, Parliamentarians and particularly commentators' and media's - reaction to Trump's suspension of aid to South Africa should be puzzling to anyone who is fixed in reality. Anyone who works in the NGO sector knows funding is not guaranteed and they are not entitled to it.  But to Trump, their reaction has been outrage, of "how dare he!", and as Rebecca Davis writes in Daily Maverick, "Trump se moer "!, quoting Parliamentarians' reaction. I worked for an NGO. The Western Cape Government funded us almost one sixth of the total budget. One year, out of the blue, just before our financial year end, they wrote funding would not be renewed the following year because our mission no longer met their funding requirements. It was untrue. We had reserves to cover perhaps one to two years. Fortunately, our director and fundraiser met their people (including at some time then premier Helen Zille) and the misunderstanding ...

Foreign aid cuts an opportunity for self-sustainability

One of Donald Trump's first decisions was suspending all foreign aid. This has thrown programmes around the world into chaos. South Africa receives funding for its HIV/AIDS programme via PEPFAR, which for now will continue. However, when the suspension was announced, there was panic, disbelief and outrage. Some media commentators incorrectly linked it to AfriForum lobbying Trump about the ANC's policies against minorities. But what is apparent is the South African government, politicians, including far-left like EFF who're enemies of "imperialist" United States, media and commentators came to be entitled to the funding.  Anyone who has worked for an NGO, as I have, knows funding is never guaranteed and could be cut at any time, for any reason. Often notice is very short although seldom as sudden as the case with USAID's. Speaking from the economics of it, I believe many foreign-funded health and education programmes in SA, if not the majority, should for the m...