Zuma: Reap the whirlwind
For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind: it hath no stalk: the bud shall yield no meal: if so be it yield, the strangers shall swallow it up. — Hosea 8:7
It felt strangely like a wake, watching the inevitability of Jacob Zuma’s election as the new head of the ANC, and proposing a wry toast. Unless he is convicted on corruption charges, which is far from certain, South Africa’s list-based proportional representation system makes him a near-certainty to become the next South African president in 2009.
That’s what you get for half-hearted commitment to market reforms and economic freedom.
Although many praise the ANC for having steered a sensible economic course, I’m far from enamoured with its record. Instead of freeing the economy, it has largely pursued a brand of national socialism not unlike that followed by the racist National Party during the Apartheid years. That the intended beneficiaries of government’s policy were infinitely more fair doesn’t change the fact that government tried — and failed — to deliver services that are beyond the ability of a government to deliver. If national socialism didn’t even work for a tiny fraction of South Africa’s population, what chance would it have of providing for the entire population?
Yes, inflation has been kept under control. Yes, economic growth has been positive. But South Africa has muddled along at a sluggish three or four percent GDP growth per annum, from a low base with high unemployment, in a global economy in which many developing economies achieved eight or ten percent. That’s what we needed to create the wealth to alleviate poverty and reduce unemployment. That’s not what we got.
Many industries were controlled by government, and many reforms were bungled. Land redistribution has progressed (if that’s the right word) at a snail’s pace. The bureaucrats in charge of land affairs appear to be largely unaware of (or uninterested in) the basic business of agriculture. Despite a surfeit of willing sellers and willing mentors, land transfers were delayed for years while farms dilapidated and equipment rusted for lack of maintenance and capital investment. When they did happen, the transfer came with no regard to the seasons, so many changed hands at the most difficult time of the year for new farmers to begin operations. Even then, the farms that did change hands were heavily encumbered: new farm owners couldn’t sell their land; they couldn’t even raise working capital because they couldn’t use their farms as collateral. Some emerging black farmers, perversely, face land restitution claims themselves. In all the bureaucratic mess, full property rights were low on the agenda, even though they are the key to make investments, growth and economic success possible. The result? Highly visible failure, a rural economy in terminal decline, and many thousands of disgruntled poor people who have nowhere to turn.
When AIDS emerged as a crisis, the government got itself in the most awful tizz, managing at various times to deny that HIV causes AIDS, to refuse offers of free anti-AIDS drugs from evil multinational profiteers, and to fail for years in rolling out anti-retroviral treatment. Its intentions, immaterial though intentions are, were probably good. It merely tried to offer a holistic disease management programme that included providing good nutrition, preventing opportunistic infections and building hospital capacity to manage out-patients who require regular long-term medication. Admirable. But ultimately, the determination for a large-scale government response proved useless, as South Africa’s AIDS crisis grew to world-leading proportions.
When access to medicines became a populist issue, the government intervened by heavy-handed regulations imposed on pharmacies. It regulated not prices, but profits, and not profit margins, but absolute profit amounts per transaction in the form of fixed “dispensing fees”. As a result, a pharmacist that stocks slow-moving, high-value medication stands to gain no more than one that stocks fast-moving, inexpensive drugs. You can guess the results. Some drugs are simply no longer on the shelves, and pharmacists are going out of business hand over fist. The intention was to improve access to medical care, but the result left the people with less access than before the government intervened.
Private charity once thrived in South Africa, by offering tempting cash prizes in return for generous donations. Who can forget the ubiquitous scratch cards that funded charities such as Operation Hunger and the Ithuba Trust? What does the government do? Ban them, and establish a monopoly on anything even remotely resembling a lottery. This step severely hobbled a thriving and effective charity industry that was funding essential social investment and poverty relief, in favour of a profiteering national lottery. And even this, the government can’t manage. When it does operate, it struggles to distribute the proceeds that are meant to fund the government’s ambitious social development projects. A similar thing happened with the casino industry. Once, a wide selection of mostly small venues offered good-value entertainment and created many jobs. Instead of regulating them to protect local communities, in the way licences impose conditions on liquor stores and bars, the government chooses to establish a cosy cartel by issuing only a handful of high-value licences. Customers can now choose between loud, crass Vegas-style ripoff joints, or loud, crass, Vegas-style ripoff joints.
Instead of making title deeds to township properties a priority, the government put a communist in charge of building matchbox houses for the poor. Some did indeed get built, but many promptly started falling apart. And as with farm redistribution, the “owners” of the new houses can’t sell them, or use them as collateral to raise money to start a business. So much for property rights. The government merely wasted public money on increasing, slightly, the stock of what Hernando de Soto famously called “dead capital”. Those people who did receive houses were left unhappy, and those who didn’t receive houses are now simply angry.
In telecommunications, the government established a monopoly, in partnership with profiteering foreign “equity partners”. The distressing results, ably summarised by William Currie and Robert Horwitz, read like the script of a disaster movie. Ironically, mobile phones were considered expensive luxuries, inessential to “basic services”, and were left to a comparatively free private industry. Unlike “basic services”, which never got delivered despite 14 years of state-managed policy designed to do so, tens of millions of mobile handsets are now in the hands South Africans, rich and poor. By some estimates, eight out of ten households have access to telecommunications thanks to mobile telephony. Government, disingenuously, tries to cover up its failures in telecoms by claiming credit for the fact that today, virtually everyone with a job has a mobile phone. Meanwhile, not everyone has access to internet bandwidth, which thanks to the monopoly on international cables, backbone networks and the local loop, is world-leading only in its ludicrous price and low quality. The government’s conflict of interest in both owning half the telecoms industry and tightly regulating it hasn’t helped. It talks of “market failure”, when a free market in telecoms never existed. It claims “privatisation” didn’t work, when all it did was turn a government department into a profiteering private monopoly, which is arguably the only worse option than a government-run telecoms system.
Throughout, the government neglected its most basic duties and core responsibilities, namely maintaining public order, protecting property rights and enforcing contract law. As a result, South Africa now faces a wave of crime that is highly organised, is absurdly violent, and thrives under either government impotence or, in some cases, active complicity at the highest levels.
I could cite many more examples, but in short, the Mbeki government ensured that its pretence at market-orientation was at best a half-hearted concession to foreign investors and what it saw as the white establishment whose wealth it needed. The result of its socialist instincts has been sluggish growth and nary a dent in unemployment. It ensured that neither the hobbled market nor the incompetent civil service managed to deliver the growth and prosperity that South Africans were promised as the dividend of freedom and a peaceful transition to democracy.
The sad thing is that undermining markets with ill-disguised socialist projects does not result in the realisation among the electorate that only economic liberty can generate the prosperity the country needs to deliver on its promises. Because the status quo had been described as “market-friendly”, the result is a rejection of those principles. Like those who argue that the failures of foreign aid to reduce poverty can be remedied simply by increasing foreign aid, or that failed government regulation can be fixed simply with more regulation, the people are demanding more from their government.
The communists, unionists and left-wing NGOs — Zuma’s support base — have been pushing collectivism and subsistence farming, in preference to sustainable agriculture that is able to feed the nation. They have argued for nationalising land and “essential” services. Despite the horrors socialism wrought in the rest of Africa, they want socialised health care, subsidised housing, state-created jobs, and government service delivery. And who can blame them? They were promised services, and they didn’t get them. They were promised jobs, that never materialised. They were promised prosperity, as if a government can wave a wand and conjure it up.
Jacob Zuma, and the new crop of unionists and Marxists that as of today head up the ruling party, have promised to do the people’s bidding. Zuma has no apparent policies of his own. He has promised to bow to his left-wing support base, yet he has promised not to do anything to scare investors. He has promised to deal with AIDS, though he apparently believes a vigorous after-action shower is an effective prophylactic against the disease. He has promised to curb crime, though he faces charges that prove him to be either corrupt or incredibly careless and naïve. He promises to be all things to all people, and if anyone doubts it, just listen to all his people singing, “Bring me my machine gun!”
Having heard nothing but empty rhetoric, the people apparently stand ready to believe that a president Jacob Zuma can deliver where president Thabo Mbeki failed. That all will be well because “Zuma cares about the people”.
Just yesterday, someone asked me whether I think being populist or socialist really is worse than being corrupt, self-serving and possibly a rapist. Assuming for the sake of argument that those charges against Jacob Zuma are true, I answered that yes, a socialist rapes and pillages the entire country.
That’s the price of the ANC’s policy, which adopted the Apartheid government’s national socialism, instead of turning away from it. Having failed to liberate the economy, a Zuma-led South Africa will try to harness it in service to the people. It will merely extend the crony capitalism that has deeply corrupted this country, rather than freeing the people from patronage. It will create a new socialist elite, instead of permitting the kind of growth that creates jobs and clothes the poor. And the people will be too busy singing and dancing and celebrating the great victory of their populist idol to fret about the fact that enslaving the productive in service to the unproductive destroys the engine of the economy. Redistribution not only reduces the creation of new wealth, it actively destroys productive capital.
My gut feel about Zuma, my fear about the combination of populism and economic illiteracy that begets socialism, may be wrong. He did, after all, position himself as all things to all people, and the new unionist secretary-general of the ANC promised its policy would not change. There are definitely two faces to Jacob Zuma. But I fear that Zuma’s left-wing supporters will get to party in the short term, and as sure as night follows day, will face a devastating economic hangover.
They have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind.















You said: “South Africa’s list-based proportional representation system makes him a near-certainty to become the next South African president in 2009.”
Proportional representation has nothing to do with it. South Africa is essentially a one-party state because the ANC gets 70% of the votes, so they get 70% of the seats in parliament. With a first-past-the-post system, they would get 100% of the seats, and there would be no opposition at all.
We from Zim wonder if Cde Zuma will take the bull by the horns and declare that Robert Mugabe / Matibili an outcast!
That’s our deepest prayer.
@ Wayne Smith: That’s not necessarily true. A constituency-based system would avoid that, for example. But you’re right, I could have phrased it more clearly: “The fact that South Africa’s president is elected by parliament, which is in turn elected by list-based proportional representation, makes him…”
@ Rev Mufaro Stig Hove: As with most policy questions, Jacob Zuma has at best been inconsistent on the subject of Robert Mugabe.
His occasional defence of Mugabe’s commitment to democracy and disastrous land reform programme is deeply troubling, no matter what harsh words he has applied to the dictator at other times. I’d be surprised to see a major change in South Africa’s official policy towards Zimbabwe, which is one of standing by quietly, appearing appropriately grave and mournful when the cameras turn towards us.
Dear Mr Ivo Vegter,
I must confess I really do not know which ANC you’re talking about in your article. Or what your objectives are.
The ANC has never proclaimed any intention to push a socialist programme. What I know is that the basic policy of the ANC is the Freedom Charter – the programme of the democratic revolution in our country. As members of the ANC, we are fighters for the Freedom Charter and its principles.
1) Are you saying to us that by pursuing the aims of the Freedom Charter, that we are socialist?
2) Or are you saying it would be better if we did not have sufficient intelligence to exercise our political freedom and instead chose to belong to the Democratic Alliance(DA), where your kind of thinking seems to belong?
Mr Vegte, please correct me if I’m wrong but our expectations in the ANC are to debate ideas and programmes, including economic ones, to advance the Freedom Charter.
If you do not like the Freedom Charter, or you think it is socialist for you and you do not like socialism, please feel free to support the neo-colonial Democratic Alliance. That is where right wing free-market capitalist economics belong.
If your economic thinking is driven by a desire to show that Freedom Charter is not viable in South Africa, then you’re against the ANC. We will give your ideas the treatment they deserve – i.e. we will reject them not because they are bad but because they do not serve the ANC’s purpose in life.
VIVA JZ!
VIVA ANC!
VIVA FREEDOM CHARTER!
Yours sincerely,
Nobhala Phesheya
Excellent points, Nobhala, and well put. I fear I must disagree, but they deserve a comprehensive response.
Let me start by answering your questions:
1) Yes. (I’ll expand below.)
2) I’m not about to judge your intelligence, nor to choose the political party you should prefer. Does it not concern you, however, that if change within the ANC is anathema, that ANC and DA are your only reasonable options (if you’ll permit me to stretch the definition of “reasonable” somewhat)?
Before I explain why I answer “yes” to point one, just a point of fact about the DA, since I can’t accept inaccurate caricatures. The DA is not neo-colonialist. It has been spectacularly bad at explaining its ideas to a potential black membership, granted, but it is neither white by choice nor colonialist in any sense. It is also not particularly right-wing, except by contrast with the ANC, perhaps. The CP was right-wing. The AWB is right-wing. The DA does support moderately free markets and capitalism, but it would be considered centre-left in most places if you were to judge them on policies rather than identity. And identity is where things get complicated. It annoys me sometimes that while I like its commitment to individual liberty, and I can go along with many of its important economic positions, an eternity under a leader who had lots of talk and little substance, combined with the crass expediency of merging with what was left of the discreditable old NP, has badly tarnished it. Voting DA would be like voting for the Libertarian Party in the US, when half its members believe aliens run the world, and the other half thought “Legalize Pot!” was the most important thing they could print on their t-shirts.
Now, the ANC and the Freedom Charter. Yes, the Freedom Charter is socialist. It would be; it was written in very different times. I’d have thought that more than half a century worth of hard lessons from other countries would have made younger ANC members interested in economic policies that actually work, and would select their leaders accordingly. I’d have thought that they wouldn’t see the Freedom Charter as a founding document (which it isn’t) or carved in stone. Even the venerable old US Constitution, adopted 230 years ago, has been amended 27 times because times changed, and thousands more amendment were proposed but rejected. The Constitution of South Africa incorporates several key Freedom Charter clauses, but it notably omits others. So arguing that the Freedom Charter should stand as immutable dogma within the ANC is not only shortsighted, but places it above the Constitution.
And while many of the Freedom Charter clauses are, in my view, essential (and I hung the document above my desk during the transition years), some of its clauses, if interpreted in a particular way, would be reasons to reject one candidate within the ANC over another, or reject the ANC altogether.
Take these clauses, for example:
If this means nationalisation, I’d oppose them wholeheartedly. If, however, it means they shall not be reserved by discriminatory laws to one race and withheld from another, I wholeheartedly agree.
Or these:
If this means state-controlled collectivism, I could call on a lot of peasants to explain why this is a bad idea, if they hadn’t gone and starved to death.
And this clause is simply wishful thinking, genie-in-a-bottle stuff:
That’s worked only twice before: when God said “Let there be light” and when AC/DC said “Let there be rock”, and at least one of those cases is disputed.
The Freedom Charter was a liberation manifesto, but that’s all it was. Don’t get me wrong, it remains largely a splendid declaration, a touchstone for our democratic freedom, and a seminal document for the ANC. But in its socialist idealism, history has proven it to be well-intended but mistaken. Our own Constitution recognises this by omission. If the ANC remains dogmatically bound by the Freedom Charter, as you, unlike me, seem to believe, then that would be a very good reason to argue that the party has achieved what it could — liberation — and that the ANC’s purpose in life now is no longer worth serving.
I fail to see a good reason for dogmatic allegiance to a party whose economic policies will fail to improve (at best) the interests of the people it is supposed to serve. Especially when those policies sacrifice long-term prosperity and sustainability for short-term populist gain. If you can give me a reason, other than blind faith that nothing outside the ANC matters, please go ahead.
[…] responded to these questions at length in his personal blog. In reply to the first question Vegter says: Yes, the Freedom Charter is socialist. It would be; it […]
Thank You for another very interesting article.
It’s really good written and I fully agree with You on main issue, btw. It’s interesting to read ideas, and observations from someone else’s point of view… it makes you think more.
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