A Tale of Two Eras: Mandela/Mbeki V. Zuma/Ramaphosa Administrations

It is an unmitigated moral tragedy that in the year of celebrating what would have been Mandela’s 101st birthday, the incumbent government has betrayed him on an issue about which he felt strongly. This is the resolution by parliament to make it constitutionally permissible to expropriate land without compensation (EWC). Despite the rhetoric to the contrary, the resolution does not exempt anyone, not any racial group or entity.

“There is no danger of us dispossessing people of property, no danger at all,” said Nelson Mandela in September 1993.

In 1994 South Africa started off on a very positive high economic growth trajectory and went on as a Mandela-Mbeki government continuum.

Mandela’s words signaled the policy thinking and implementation that generally characterized the government’s direction, “It is not a question any longer about whether the world embraces a free market economy.  The globalized world in which we live has made it imperative that we open our markets both internally and to the outside world. Closed markets and command economies are self-evidently inappropriate for our times.”

[perfectpullquote align=”left” bordertop=”false” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]To some degree, this seems to be continuing into the Ramaphosa administration with some of the worst ministerial malcontents being rewarded with high positions despite their disastrous performances and being implicated in corruption, as illustrated by the tragic Esidimeni saga, Bosasa, and so many other instances.[/perfectpullquote]

Mandela’s policy achievements should be celebrated.  On 9 December 2013, Matthew Davies, the BBC News reporter cited Annabel Bishop’s (group economist at Investec) comment on Mandela’s achievement that the South African economy “essentially doubled in real terms since the fall of apartheid, growing at an average of 3.2 percent per year since 1994. This was the case for 14 years thereafter.”

Policies enacted during the Mandela-Mbeki administration were evidently predicated on rational, pragmatic and principled considerations.  These policies attracted substantial foreign direct investment and stimulated domestic investment.  Overall the policies were based on what accounts for high growth economies throughout the world. According to Economic Freedom of the World, the empirical study published annually by the Fraser Institute, which involves over 100 think tanks, the correlation between free economies and economic growth and wealth are unambiguous: countries that are economically free tend to grow faster and be more prosperous.

[perfectpullquote align=”right” bordertop=”false” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]With the election of President Zuma, the country suffered moribund growth not seen since the dark days of apartheid and an administration characterized by unprecedented looting of the public purse.[/perfectpullquote]

Economically freer countries are also characterized by lower levels of unemployment, better education outcomes, better medical care, and longer life spans. In fact, by any measure of human progress and prosperity economically freer countries are better off. It is noteworthy that this is axiomatically substantiated by the Intellectual Property Rights Index and the World Competitiveness Report.

During the Mbeki presidency with Trevor Manuel as the Minister of Finance, data published by South African Market Insights demonstrates that South Africa posted an average GDP growth rate of 4.2 percent (quarter on quarter annualized), with an annual average inflation rate of 5.7 percent. Having built upon the foundations of economic freedom laid down by President Mandela, it seemed that the South Africa economic growth trajectory under the Mbeki Manuel leadership was destined to lift the South African economy out of economic stagnation and lack of freedom characterized by the Apartheid regime. Then disaster struck.

With the election of President Zuma, the country suffered moribund growth not seen since the dark days of apartheid and an administration characterized by unprecedented looting of the public purse.

Investment strategist, Magnus Heystek, provides a catalog reflecting a litany of woes that characterize the administration under President Zuma. Between 2009 and 2017 the average economic growth rate “barely exceeded” 1.5 percent; foreign direct investment (FDI) declined from plus 22.7 percent as a percentage of GDP to massive capital flight registering a negative net rate of 29 percent in 2017. In short, Heystek states that “Zuma’s term brought destruction and carnage to South Africa’s economy.”

To some degree, this seems to be continuing into the Ramaphosa administration with some of the worst ministerial malcontents being rewarded with high positions despite their disastrous performances and being implicated in corruption, as illustrated by the tragic Esidimeni saga, Bosasa, and so many other instances.

Under President Ramaphosa the economy has continued to stagnate, registering a growth rate of less than 1 percent for 2018. Considering that the South African population continues to expand at a faster rate it means that South Africans are getting poorer on average. Considering the bleak economic forecasts many people have opted to invest their dwindling resources in other jurisdictions, and according to PSG Wealth, R350 billion has left the country over a period of 16 months.

The Zuma-Ramaphosa continuum policy environment has clearly been driven more by populist rhetoric, political opportunism and expediency as the primary, if not exclusive, consideration with the elections due to take place in 2019. Consider the introduction of a national minimum wage, National Health Insurance, expropriation without compensation and a litany of other pieces of legislation that will significantly curtail economic freedoms and are destined to entrench SA’s low-no growth scenario.

This is not surprising because politicians have an uncanny habit of enacting outrageous policies without subjecting them to rigorous analysis in terms of their conceivable and foreseeable effects. They know that the policies will not impact on themselves as they can always continue to commandeer the beleaguered taxpayers’ resources to pay their salaries and fringe benefits. They are also well-placed to continue plundering state assets.

While the EWC measure is quite clearly politically expedient, it is economically destructive and morally egregious. The threat of its implementation has very seriously upset race relations in this country with the realization of the rainbow nation receding.

It would be the height of naivety for the nation to believe that the solution to the multifaceted socioeconomic challenges that confront South Africa can be found in investing in any messiah. The answer lies in empirically proven policies that result in the greatest number of people participating as producers and consumers in the creation of wealth and jobs in the economy.

Temba A Nolutshungu is a Director of the Free Market Foundation. As one of the pioneers of the black consciousness movement his inevitable collision with the apartheid state saw him traverse the ideological spectrum from an inveterate communist to an advocate of classical liberalism. Temba ascribes this metamorphosis to the fact that the apartheid state was omnipotent, dictating the lives of blacks from cradle to grave. Having been detained twice under the Terrorism Act, his resolve to be instrumental in limiting the power of government was strengthened by his immersion in the writings of Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman, Walter Williams, and Thomas Sowell.

Photo Credit: Getty Images

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