Sindile Vabaza, an aspiring economist and an avid writer, is a contributing author for the Free Market Foundation.
For interviews:
gailday@fmfsa.org
The views expressed in the article are the author's and not necessarily shared by the members of the Foundation.
This article may be republished without prior consent but with acknowledgement to the author.
The FMF is an independent, non-profit, public benefit organisation, created in 1975 by pro-free market business and civil society national bodies to work for
a non-racial, free and prosperous South Africa.
As a policy organisation it promotes sound economic policies and the principles
of good law. As a think tank it seeks and puts forward solutions to some of the country's most pressing problems: unemployment, poverty, growth, education, health care, electricity supply, and more. The FMF was instrumental in the post-apartheid negotiations and directly influenced the Constitutional Commission to include the property
rights clause: a critical cornerstone of economic freedom.
CONTACT US
+27 11 884 0270
FMF@fmfsa.org
PO Box 4056, Cramerview 2060
|
|
|
This article was first published by BizNews on 30 June 2022.
What is the government’s actual plan: Decoding World Bank loans?
In a press statement released on the 13th of June 2022, the World Bank Group Board of Executive Directors approved a 454.4 million Euro (ZAR7.6 billion or $480 million) loan for South Africa’s COVID-19 Emergency Response Project. The loan comes following a request by the Government of South Africa (GoSA), for assistance in financing vaccine procurement contracts. Specifically, the project will retroactively finance the procurement of 47 million COVID-19 vaccine doses by the GoSA.
What has not been reported as much is an old loan of $750 million which GoSA received from the World Bank on the 20th of January 2022. Of particular interest is how this development policy loan (DPL) is going to be supporting the government’s Economic Reconstruction and Recovery Plan (ERRP).
While there aren’t any specific allocations made within the 38-page ERRP document released by the government, it is useful to look at some of the government’s plans. These can be broadly defined as ever more state intervention in financial markets and the economy through the building up of the capacity of the so called ‘capable state.’ It is useful to ask as a starting point why having more state intervention in the economy should be seen as a good thing, considering that post the financial crash of 2008, the Zuma government also had extravagant plans of rebuilding South Africa which ultimately led to the feeding frenzy known as State Capture.
It isn’t particularly clear how the Ramaphosa government will ensure this doesn’t happen, especially as money filters down to the profoundly incompetent and hubristic mess that is local government. There is no clear indication of how exactly cronyism and nepotism will be prevented in the awarding of contracts, and why the public more broadly and taxpayers more specifically should trust that there is political will and competence to root nefarious actors out of these processes.
Establishment of a state bank
Perhaps the clearest indication of the government’s plans to build a capable state is the plan to establish a state bank. State banks were originally championed by economists, such as Arthur Lewis and Gunnar Myrdal, who were proponents of greater participation by the public sector in financial markets.
In an interactive online discussion on the 6th of October 2021, hosted by the Centre for Development and Enterprise, Reserve Bank governor Lesetja Kganyago questioned the role a state bank would play that is not already being played by commercial banks. He goes on to say:
“The South African financial inclusion figures show that over 80% of people have access to financial services in South Africa … If a state bank comes in, I suppose it might end up playing in the 20% ... I am not clear what ill the state bank would be trying to cure … I don’t know what the role of the state bank will be … but the state owns a retail bank called the PostBank, an infrastructure bank called the Development Bank of Southern Africa, an industrial bank called the Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa. The state also owns the largest asset manager on the African continent, the Public investment Corporation.”
Governor Kganyago’s questions and concerns are amplified by a 2019 blog post on the London School of Economics website by authors Orkun Saka and Cagatay Bircan, which summarized their research in a published paper examining political influence on state bank lending in Turkey.
What happened in Turkey is particularly instructive for South Africa as the period of fifteen years the authors studied was characterized by a single party in the central government which had direct authority over 3 state banks.
The authors found that state banks in Turkey, when compared with privately-owned banks, lend more in provinces where the incumbent mayor is affiliated with the ruling party, and faces strong political competition from opponents in the run-up to local elections. In contrast, the very same state banks instead decrease their lending in similarly competitive provinces but with an incumbent mayor from an opposition party.
This finding should be cause for great concern, not only because of the ruling party’s well documented history of malfeasance, but also because of the surge of political party opposition in the country where the ruling party continues to lose in key municipal battlegrounds.
The authors go on to say:
“Both effects (the relative increase in state-bank credit in allied regions as well as the decrease in opposition regions) arise only prior to the dates of local elections and peak either on the exact election quarter or one quarter earlier before quickly dissipating after the election. This lends support to theories of tactical redistribution, which predict that governments use public resources (in this case, lending by state-owned banks) as a strategic tool for re-election purposes.
Consistent with the argument that local politicians are usually judged by local economic performance, we find that the credit cycle is mainly driven by corporate lending, while it does not appear in consumer credit. This is consistent with the idea that voters, who have imperfect information about the drivers of economic growth, attribute fluctuations in economic performance mainly to the incumbent mayors. Thus, our findings suggest that, by strategically redistributing corporate credit prior to elections, politicians indirectly target the creation of jobs and investment to increase the electoral chances of their own mayoral candidates.”
An inclusive economy: food security and education
A consistent theme in the ERRP is the government’s intention to restructure the economy towards being an inclusive one through the development of a capable state. While an inclusive economy is desirable considering South Africa’s race based historical inequities, it is less clear how a capable state will ameliorate these problems, especially pertaining to food security and education which are key drivers of upward mobility and therefore inclusivity.
It does not make sense for the government to tackle food insecurity without tackling food wastage first. An estimated 10.3 million tonnes of the 31 million tonnes of food produced in this country goes to waste but because South Africa is a net exporter of food the ratio of food wastage goes from 34% to roughly 45%. This is staggering in a country where, according to Stats SA, 23.6% of South Africans were affected by moderate to severe food insecurity and 14.9% experienced severe food insecurity.
Rather than looking to work with farmers and supermarkets to fix the inefficiencies in the system where perfectly good food ends up in landfills, the government is pursuing complex and expensive bureaucratic plans which may or may not work, and will take a long time to materialise while desperate South Africans and their children continue to starve.
This starving of children has direct impact on the education system as well. Children born to food insecure-mothers, and who grow up in food insecure households, are far more likely to be intellectually and emotionally stunted and develop serious behavioural problems. Food insecure-mothers struggle to bond with their infants and toddlers leading to childhood neglect.
It is unclear how the government intends to deal with rogue teachers and the unions who protect them, or the fact that there are problems of a lack of teacher content knowledge in vital subjects. As it stands only about half of all South African children graduate from high school, and there is little indication that the 78% of grade 4’s who cannot read or write for understanding leave high school as functionally literate and numerate.
With this in mind, how exactly does the government intend to build an inclusive economy that will tackle poverty and inequality? How will the so-called ‘capable state’ do this and ready South African children for the fourth industrial revolution?
Why can't private providers of education whom the middle class increasingly rely on be the ones to tackle the education crisis through school vouchers?
Conclusion
While there are many other problems that could be highlighted concerning the ERRP, including how the government will ensure money meant for public infrastructure programs will not fall into the blackhole of municipal incompetence and collapsing finances or how localisation plans could entrench vested interests and patronage while undermining both the spirit and potential of the Africa Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
The possibility of SMEs being shut out in favour of large corporations due to the expensive regulatory burden that will come with localisation plans is also a real concern.
A state bank and food insecurity and education perhaps best typify the supremely inefficient and lack of evidence-based approach(ideological) to the government’s proposed solutions in the ERRP. It should cause South Africans great concern that the government will receive external funding for such plans which will become a noose around the necks of future generations.
We need less of the state. Fewer burdensome regulations. Less expensive bureaucratic overlay to solutions.
We need more economic freedom and less of a so-called capable state to address our most pressing problems.
|
|
|