It is the Economy after all

How much better would the governing ANC have been received by the voters everywhere had they been supported by a rising tide of incomes and jobs, painfully absent since 2019? Including a scarcity of good jobs in the public sector (teachers, nurses, doctors) that have proved unaffordable, absent the growth in government revenues that comes painlessly with growth?


Yet even impressive and necessary fiscal austerity has not soothed the investors in SA government debt that have to cover our lack of tax revenue. They continue to demand high nominal and after inflation returns funding the RSA for fear that slow growth in the economy and in tax revenues makes printing money and more inflation much more likely sometime in the future.


And households have had to ante up the extra taxes needed to pay the extra interest on their national and on more costly personal debt. And to support a growing dependence on poverty relief provided to half of all SA households. Leaving less spending power available to households to encourage businesses to supply them with more of goods and services they much desire. And businesses, largely bereft of growing markets, have hired fewer workers and added to their growth enhancing plant and equipment, at a slower pace. High interest rates have meant high costs of funding businesses- that further discourage the essential work providers.


Welfare rather than work has been the SA poverty relief programme – and unintendedly but inevitably -discouraged the supply of labour. With regulated minimum wages adding further dis-incentives to the demand for and supply of labour. A potentially very valuable economic resource thus goes wasted and potential workers become highly frustrated. 11 million South Africans are formally employed outside of agriculture, out of an adult population of 40 million. Many middle income participants in formal employment with access to excellent privately supplied medical benefits, apparently were put off by the promise of equally good health care, provided publicly. Their trust in effective government delivery has understandably been lost and will not be easily regained. A fact of SA political life that any political party, that depends existentially on support from the centre, should recognise.


Slow growth has its own vicious spiral downwards and faster growth lifts all boats including those piloted by government agencies. And any governing party chastened by their electorate would surely look to the economy to improve their own re-election prospects next time, as well as the prospects of the citizenry. They would put both Party and SA in joint first place encouraging a stronger economy.
The ANC government, recently, especially it’s Treasury, has not wanted for plans for reform. Private-public partnerships to invigorate the failing infrastructure feature prominently and are welcome. And its Budget deserves support from the economically literate. Being allowed to proceed on its announced path, with the hope they could do much better in executing its plans, would clearly be a relief to SA business and its funders. The largely stable stock, bond and currency markets suggest that it will be so allowed.


The essentially market friendly DA party and its fellow travellers, with about 120 of the 400 MP’s under its wing, would offer the much preferred partner for the ANC in government were growth and re-election prospects front of the ANC mind. The EFF and the MK do not offer or even promise faster growth -they have other growth destroying re-distribution objectives.


The very different approaches to racially biased interventions in the labour market, rather than merit based value for money contracts for labour, goods and services, is a serious difference between the ideologically interventionist ANC and the instinctively more market friendly DA. Yet the interference in the SA markets based on racial identity and preferments of one kind and another has been a primary contributor to persistently slow growth. Both by making business less efficient and confident and less valuable than they would otherwise have been. And indirectly when the economic agenda- what government does – is set by rent seeking opportunists – rather than determined by a national interest in value for tax money. Any political development in SA that leads to more meritocratic efficiency and less crony capitalism would be growth and vote gathering.