My dear
friends and fellow South Africans,
In matters of
this nature there is no satisfaction, but only pain
in having been proven right.
Last week the
parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Trade and
Industry held public hearings on the Industrial
Policy Action Plan 2 ("IPAP2"). Industries across
the spectrum appeared at the hearings and complained
about how our entire export oriented manufacturing
and service sectors are being put out of business
because of the strong Rand. They indicated that
often it takes as much as twenty years to regain a
lost foreign market segment or overseas client. The
consequences for the employment of South Africans
are devastating.
More than a
year ago I called on the Reserve Bank and the
Minister of Finance to dramatically cut interest
rates and devalue the Rand as an urgent and
necessary measure to save our crumbling industrial
platform. It took more than a year for the seeds of
my conventional wisdom to become government policy.
It has now been announced in IPAP2 and by the
Minister of Finance in his address to Parliament.
Yet
apparently no action has been taken by the Reserve
Bank to devalue the Rand, which highlights what has
become a common pattern of divorce between public
policies and national interests on the one side, and
Reserve Bank policies and financial and banking
interests on the other.
It takes no
clairvoyance to predict that a strong Rand will
collapse the economic success of the 2010 FIFA World
Cup by dramatically reducing tourism. Unfortunately
South Africa is only a marginal tourist destination
on account of the enormous airfare costs to get here
from the whole of Europe, the East, and North and
South America alike, where people have the option of
flying to comparable tourist destinations often for
as little as USD200, where they also find good
quality but inexpensive hotels and restaurants.
The other
common element emerging from most of the
presentations given by industrialists in the
aforesaid public hearings was the devastating impact
on our economy inflicted by the ever-present
monopolies, cartels and practices in restraint of
trade which have undermined our international
competitiveness and are imposing huge costs on our
consumers.
Again IPAP2
echoes these concerns, recognizing that the mould in
which the industrial base of South Africa was cast
during apartheid and its economic isolation cannot
make us a living when global competitiveness is the
only option. Both the President in his State of the
Nation Address and the Minister of Finance in his
address to Parliament stressed how our success in
conquering the many social and economic challenges
South Africa is facing hinge upon our capability of
developing goods and services to be marketed
globally.
I identified
the problems of our economy being shaped around
monopolies, cartels and practices in restraint of
trade as early as the days of our Kempton Park
negotiations in 1992, and tabled this as a necessary
item to address for a successful constitutional
outcome. Unfortunately my proposals were ignored. I
have continued to express this concern relentlessly
since then.
Since then a
great deal of lip service has been paid to
rectifying the problem, but little action has
followed. The Competition Commission has proven to
be a failure both because of its inefficiency and
ineffectiveness, and because of the limits of its
legislation and mandate. In countries where
antitrust legislation has been successful, the
possibility exists for private enforcement which
grants a successful plaintiff a reward for having
taken the action in the form of punitive or triple
damages.
Moreover,
vast segments of our economy have been frozen out of
the action of the Competition Commission on account
of monopolies, cartels and practices in restraint of
trade having been entrenched in legislation,
regulations and government practices.
Practices of
this nature have become so entrenched that they have
almost become part of the business model of the
Industrial Development Corporation, which
historically has financed businesses which it knew
it could make succeed by calling on Government to
impose a wall of protectionist measures around them
in terms of increased import tariffs, subsidies,
decreased international or domestic competition or
outright hegemonic positions in the marketplace.
This also
raises concerns about the IDC having become an
industrial complex in itself through the broad range
of equity participations it holds in the industries
it has financed. In this sense, the IDC itself
operates as a cartel which has no interest in
financing businesses which compete with those in
which the IDC holds an equity position and from
which it derives the large revenue stream which has
thus far supported both its operations and some of
the largest salaries in the country paid to its
executives.
In the end,
we South Africans pay the price for all this many
times over.
First, by
paying often as much as twice for goods and services
produced in South Africa under conditions which
enable businesses to have inflated profits and
market positions. Secondly, we pay often as much as
twice for goods and services imported from abroad in
conditions artificially created to enable excess
gross profits with competing businesses in South
Africa.
Third, our
taxes take our money from families to transfer it in
the form of subsidies.
But the
greatest price we are paying for all this is that
our industrial base is crumbling. Under present
conditions we will not be able to create a new one,
for the way of manufacturing in the 21st century is
to produce for the global market. This will result
in decreased employment, higher prices and a vicious
circle which will keep the poor poor, progressively
erode the middle class and allow profits to be made
for a rapidly narrowing group of rich
industrialists, politics potentates and their
cronies. That would be the triumph of greed and
political myopia.
I carry no
brief for the upper or the middle classes. They have
never supported or financed me. For the past 40
years I found myself defending their role and
position in society because I receive my political
brief from the poorest of the poor, who will stand
to lose the most in the disintegration of the middle
class and the narrowing of the upper class.
That is,
unless one is still nourishing deluded dreams of a
communist revolution which, worldwide, has proven
capable only of spreading untold miseries equally
for all.
It will now
take a huge amount of strong political will to turn
this mess around. At this point, this political will
can only come from the President, if he rises to the
challenge of taking charge and making the giant leap
from words, policies and well-documented plans of
action to the actual relentless set of actions which
our dramatic circumstances now call for.
In so doing,
he may have to push forward by leaving some behind,
as the country can no longer indulge in paralysis by
analysis, consensus and workshops.
Yours in the service of our
nation,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi MP
President: Inkatha Freedom Party
Media enquiries: Liezl van der
Merwe, 082 729 2510.