As the pending
economic catastrophe continues to build, the Deputy President has joined the
bandwagon, admitting that numerous mistakes have been made by ‘previous
administrations’, and promising that the current bunch will do better. Thinking South Africans will be excused for
saying that they have heard it all before.
They did not believe it then, and they believe it even less now. Perhaps the Honourable Deputy President
should learn that the ANC of five, ten, fifteen or twenty years ago is the same
ANC that continues to mismanage the once-strong South African economy. The truth is that the ANC has demonstrated
clearly that it has no ability to ensure the provision of the fundamentals
necessary to build the country, but has chosen to use the country as a resource
to build their personal wealth, in a fashion typical of numerous other African
banana republics.
What are
the fundamentals of a strong economy?
The first
fundamental is an education system that produces children who are capable of
working productively in the economy.
No-one, apart from the ANC, can claim that South Africa has that
system. The ‘improvements’ in the Matric
pass rate have been achieved by reducing the pass rate to 30%! Can you imagine driving over a bridge
designed by an engineer who achieved 30% in Maths? Can you imagine a coal storage bunker to hold
10 000 tons of material being designed by such a man, or a shopping mall? Oops!
We have those examples!
The second
fundamental is a civil service that is both competent and honest. No-one, apart from the ANC, can claim that
South Africa has that civil service. The
Deputy President has claimed proudly that nearly 30% of the municipalities have
achieved a clean audit report! Isn’t it
remarkable that the pass rate on audit reports is the same as that required for
a Matric? In any civilized society, a
government that achieves less than 100% clean audits for its activities would
be thrown out at the next election, or, more likely, would take the honourable
route of resigning and handing over the reins of government to a competent
group of people. Unfortunately, honour
is a concept that is foreign to the ANC, as has been shown so clearly by the
shenanigans of the State President.
The third
fundamental is a government that the people trust, headed by a man of
impeccable credentials. The laws
governing banks and insurance companies require that every senior officer and
Director of such institutions should be a ‘fit and proper person’. The standards used to determine this quality
include history of conduct, relevant education, current competence and other
similar factors. On that basis, very few
of our numerous Ministers and Deputy Ministers, not to mention the senior civil
servants, would qualify. Does that mean
that the management of the country requires a lower standard of competence and
integrity than the management of a bank or insurance company?
The fourth
fundamental is that the government recognizes the needs for infrastructure
investment and ensures that the requirements of the developing economy are met
before they become bottlenecks. Things
like roads, rail systems, electricity supply, telephone and internet systems,
postal service, are all essential elements of a modern economy. Not one of those elements is met to anywhere
near the level required by South Africa.
However, this cannot surprise anyone who understands that the State
President was not aware of the R246 000 000 being spent on his
personal estate!
The fifth
fundamental is that the people of the country have a Government that they can,
and do, trust. South Africans have,
unfortunately, become accustomed to the lies and dissimulations of the senior
members of Government, their avoidance of pointed questions even in Parliament,
their consistent unwillingness to comply with the law in relation to disclosure
of information. They have learned to
question the motivations of the top people in everything they do, to the extent
that a popular talk show host asked what the State President was doing in Russia
recently. The answer came a couple of
days later, when Russia announced that it had signed a contract to supply R111
billions of nuclear power stations to South Africa! In the climate of distrust that now prevails,
the frenzied attempts by the Departments of Energy and Public Works to explain
that these were really only pre-tender feelings out of the capabilities of
possible suppliers all fell on deaf ears. The question, however, remains
unanswered. What was the President doing
in Russia? The events related to the Arms Deal are still creating ripples,
regardless of the attempts by the Commission to paper over the cracks.
The sixth
fundamental is that the government does what is required to ensure that as many
people as possible are enabled to look after themselves. With 17 000 000 grant recipients,
living on the backs of 4 200 000 taxpayers, that can certainly not be
said to be the case in South Africa! Add
to that the fact that 27% of all employees in South Africa are employed by the Government. Experience of the competence of all forms of
government must lead to the conclusion that at least half of those Government
employees are in reality recipients of a different form of social grant. It requires little intelligence to understand
that this is a situation that cannot continue.
But then, intelligence is not one of the noteworthy attributes of the
present Government.
It is clear
that South Africa is on an accelerating decline. The only question is how long it will take to
collapse.
The process
of collapse will be painful to all in the country, and the longer it takes for
that collapse to reach the nadir, the more pain will be suffered, and the
longer and harder the recovery will be.
The Germans have a saying: rather
an end with suffering than suffering without end. We collectively have the choice, to allow it
all to continue, or to put an end to it, the right way or the hard way. Perhaps it is time for those with their hands
on economic power to stand up and say ‘No more!’ Perhaps it is time to recognise that this
country belongs to the people who work to support it, not to the parasites who steal
from the public.
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