The Bold Voice of J&K

Decline of South African economy

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 Gwynne Dyer 

South Africa is now verging on the status of economic basket case. The gross domestic growth last year was around half of one per cent, the country’s currency has been in free fall for the past year, and its bonds face an imminent downgrade to ‘junk’ status. So is the South African economy doomed to a long period of low or no growth no matter who is in charge – or is President Jacob Zuma to blame?
“Zuma is no longer a President that deserves respect from anyone,” said Julius Malema, leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, in South Africa’s Parliament last month. And as Zuma tried to give his eighth State-of-the-Nation speech (he became President in 2009), the EFF members of Parliament chanted ‘Zupta must fall’. (‘Zupta’ is a reference to Zuma’s close ties with the immensely wealthy Gupta family).
Malema does not qualify as an unbiased observer, but his view of Zuma is shared right across the political spectrum in South Africa and beyond. “No one believes anything he says,” concluded veteran political analyst William Gumede. And yet Zuma continues to be in charge of Africa’s largest economy – which is now deteriorating practically by the day.
Post-apartheid South Africa was never a great economic success. After the end of apartheid in 1994, there were high hopes that the economy would grow at six per cent annually or better and create half a million new jobs a year. In reality, growth averaged just over three per cent in the next decade – and then fell off a cliff after the global financial crisis of 2008.
It is no crime that Zuma was born poor and never went to school. Neither is it a crime that he has never worked in the private sector: All his jobs, from the age of 16, have been in the service of the now-ruling African National Congress. But it is remarkable, given these facts, that he has nevertheless become very rich (at least $20 million).
Zuma has never been jailed for corruption, but his principal financial adviser, Schabir Shaik, was sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2005 for corruption and fraud. The judge said that the evidence of a corrupt relationship between Shaik and Zuma was “overwhelming”, and Zuma was immediately fired as Deputy President by the then President Thabo Mbeki. Or consider the astounding events of last December, when South Africa had three Ministers of Finance in the same week.
The first Finance Minister, the widely respected Nhlanhla Nene, had annoyed Zuma by refusing to approve some very large contracts in nuclear energy and the state-owned airline. (Nene may have suspected that big kickbacks were involved.) So he was dismissed.
The second Finance Minister was David van Rooyen, an unknown party wheelhorse with no financial experience. It was soon discovered that he had close ties to the Gupta family, which gave rise to speculation that Zuma was helping the Guptas to capture control of the state’s financial policies. He was forced to resign after four days.
The third man, Pravin Gordhan, was respectable and competent, but by then South Africa’s stock market had collapsed, its currency had tanked, and the Standard and Poor’s ratings firm had reduced the country’s credit rating to just one notch above ‘junk’ status.
The best that South Africa could ever have expected was the three per cent growth that it had in 1996-2008. That would have been barely enough to meet popular expectations for rising living standards. The main cause for its failure to meet those expectations, and for any political upheavals that may subsequently ensue, is Zuma.

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