Godongwana is the head of the
part of the ANC charged with economic planning. When he was asked what the
reaction of the Government would be to the Ratings Agencies’ downgrade of South
African bonds, Godongwana replied that they were starting to think about it,
but it was difficult, because the second downgrade came only four days after
the first, and they need now to digest what the effects will be!
The answer is frightening,
because such a Ratings Agency downgrade has been an imminent reality since at
the latest Nene-Gate, in December 2015. In any responsible group dealing with
economic planning, consideration must be given to possible threats, even if
they are not imminent. Planning can be defined as dealing with a problem
situation before it becomes a reality, and the threat that has now become
reality has been considered in the Press for at least as long as Zuma’s second
term as President. The ANC has had at least three years to do the research and
considerations, yet it was still taken by surprise when it happened. Even now,
Godongwana appears to be confused by the scope and complexity of the downgrades’
effects.
One wonders how effectively the
ANC will respond to this crisis in our economy. The President seems to be
almost completely ignorant of what it really means, and seems to believe that
the cause for the downgrading lies at the feet of White Monopoly Capital (whatever
that might be), as driven by the ‘agents of regime change’, another undefined but
clearly evil group of Western capitalists, or imperialists, or whatever, as
long as they are not ANC drones, whose sole aim in life is the downfall of the ‘glorious
democratic revolution’ that swept this ignorant bunch of terrorists to power.
Godongwana appears to subscribe to the same level of ignorance, and one wonders
whether this state is at the behest of the President. The new Minister of
Finance, whose sole qualification for the job seems to be that he is beholden
to Zuma (one wonders what happened to Des van Rooyen, who, Zuma has stated
several times, was the best-qualified Minister of Finance ever, but was
nevertheless not chosen again for the job again), gives every appearance of
being overwhelmed by the job, perhaps now understanding that, if he goes
against his boss’ order to facilitate the Russian nuclear deal, he will lose
the job, while, if he gives effect to that order, he will end up at the end of
the same rope that is being talked about as Zuma’s likely fate once the people
come to understand what he has done to them.
And all of this is happening as
the economy spirals down, with factory output down 3,7% in February 2017
(before the downgrades became reality), and the President’s public acceptance
at 15%, the lowest of any sitting President ever. How much worse will it be
when the effects of the downgrades start to bite? When another million people
are added to the list of unemployed? When another two hundred factories close
their doors? When interest rates on the home loans taken by the tens of
thousands of new Government employees rise by a half, making the repayments
unaffordable while the Government (or the other employers) put a freeze on
salary hikes in a desperate bid to remain solvent, making those loans
unaffordable? When the White Monopoly Capital banks decide that they cannot
afford the tens of thousands of defaulting loans and foreclose, putting those
homes on the market at knock-down prices, because no-one else in the
stagflation economy can afford to pay even those low prices? When the
Government is unable to pay the social grants to 17 500 000 grant
recipients, because the tax revenue has collapsed and foreign lenders are
unwilling to take the risk of advancing more money to this Government, which
has demonstrated its inability to meet the most elementary planning requirement
of a Government in the civilized world?
There can be no doubt that South
Africa is now deeply ensnared in an economic crisis, one that is deepening by
the day. South Africa has been in this crisis for many years, as the Government
has worked hard to make business ever-more difficult, to impose ever-more
stringent requirements for those within the country and from beyond its borders
to undertake investments (by means of equity participation and the requirement
to employ a percentage of Blacks in positions for which none on the employment
market are qualified, and by means of lowering the standard of education to the
point where South Africans rank as one of the 5% worst-educated people, despite
expending more per capita on the educations system), and all the while blaming
Jan van Riebeeck, who passed away 350 years ago, and who ran the then South
African economy for less than a quarter of the time that the ANC has been in
power. There can also be no doubt that the ANC is one of the worst-equipped
Parties in the world to manage its way out of the crisis.
The worst of it all is that Enoch
Godongwana, the man charged with formulating the policies that will guide the
ANC in its attempts to resolve the situation, is willing to demonstrate so
clearly to the public, in South Africa and the world at large, that he has no
clue as to what the crisis is, and what the way out might be.
Any more downgrades & anti zuma marches & the anc will be forced to nationalise the mines & banks next.
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