The announcement by Anglo Plats that it is to close several
shafts and lose 14 000 jobs comes as no surprise to any intelligent
observer. That sort of action is
inevitable, given the free-wheeling nature of Government actions, the
ever-increasing burden on employers and the inability of the Government to
provide a set of labour market conditions that is conducive to the creation of
jobs. These factors have been in
operation for virtually the duration of the ANC control of the Government, and
show all the signs of becoming increasingly investment-unfriendly.
The response by the Minister of Mineral resources is also no
surprise. The ANC Government as a whole
has a tendency to act as though it is the sole arbiter of what happens in the
direct investment field. The arrogant
comments made by this particular Minister, one who has failed to cover herself
in glory, is equally typical of the statements by representatives of Government
and the ANC.
What are the broader facts?
Investors make an investment decision on the basis of the
expected return on the investment in the light of the perceived risks of the
investment, and the return and risk profile of all the alternative investment
possibilities. The decision does not
take into account Government policies, Party desires and Ministerial
sensitivities. It ignores all factors in
the economy that do not bear directly on the risk and return. All of these extraneous factors may play a
role once the investment has been made, and frequently blackmail is exercised
by the Government and the Unions to achieve their desires in the short term,
but the fact remains that the people who really count, the investors who put up
the money that is then used as a blackmail tool, will sooner or later make a
rational decision based entirely on the fundamentals that are important to them
– risk and return.
The desires of the Government play practically no role
unless they are converted to legislation or extra-legislative threats to the
business in which the investors have made their investments. The sort of petulant statements, as that made
by the Minister, Susan Shabangu, go a very long way to assure the foreign
investors that South Africa is not a good place to be. These statements come on the heels of months
of discussion regarding the nationalization of the mines, often demanded
without compensation, the threat of compulsory acquisition of a share in the
companies by Government or by Government-favoured stooges under the guise of
Black Economic Empowerment. They follow
the withdrawal by a number of wealthy foreign direct investors who saw, early
on, that South Africa is
following the Zimbabwe
route to economic disintegration, and the proof of that in the call by the ANC
for foreign buyers to boycott South African products like wines and grapes.
The facts are that the ANC is proving to foreign investors
that South Africa
wants their money, but does not wish to offer a fair deal in return. The final fact is already becoming
clear: Foreign direct investment, an
absolute essential for growth in South Africa ,
is starting to look beyond the Freedom Struggle rhetoric and to see the
economic basket case that South
Africa is becoming.