Bold decisions needed for SA to achieve 6% growth

Thursday, July 13, 2017

Johannesburg - If South Africa is to achieve 6% growth, extraordinary bold decisions that change the economy must be made, says Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba.

“If we must rebound from a low growth trajectory into which we currently are in; if we must grow our economy at 6% on a sustainable basis; we must take extraordinarily bold decisions that change the structure of production and the sectoral composition of the economy and at the same time change the patterns of ownership over the long haul,” he said on Thursday.

Speaking at the Thomson Reuters economist of the year award ceremony at the Johannesburg Stock Exchange in Sandton, Minister Gigaba said lower than expected growth is likely this year. Heading towards the tabling of the Medium Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS), in October, will require that tough decisions be made.

Speaking to economists gathered at the award ceremony, the Minister said the South African economy which recently entered into a technical recession following years of slow growth means that the country is far from achieving the 5-6% growth target.

“We are far from achieving the 5 to 6% growth target we need in order to begin to dramatically reduce poverty, unemployment and inequality,” he said.

The Minister called on all sectors of the economy including government, business, labour and civil society to do its part to grow the economy while making it more inclusive and fair.

This as the National Development Plan (NDP) “commits us to pursuing growth and economic transformation, we need to do both because one without the other would be inadequate.”

Minister Gigaba said the term “Radical Economic Transformation” has been criticised as either being undefined or a smokescreen for a plot to capture the state. “It has been falsely pitted against inclusive growth or even radical social economic transformation. The crux of the debate is that unless we have an economic discourse that generally seeks to confront the status quo, we will continue to speak past one another.”

In order to protect the economy that already exists, several things need to be done including the need to transform the sectoral composition of the economy to reflect a post-apartheid industrial economy, as well as to end the apartheid colonial dual economy by developing a productive economy in the townships and rural economies and creating an enabling environment.

“These elements are far more radical than the incremental changes we have pursued thus far. Incrementalism and short-termism are the enemy of such radicalism,” he said.

Role played by economists

In addition, government is cognisant of the role played by economists. Economists, he said, have invaluable knowledge.

“We need more proposals on solutions. We are interested in your perspectives and ideas on how best to grow and transform the economy,” he said, adding that government is committed to listening to a variety of views.

Positives

Minister Gigaba said that despite the setback of the recession, there are positives on which the country can draw on.

“A recovery in domestic GPD growth is achievable due to a number of favourable factors including stronger global growth and global commodity prices, improved availability of electricity supply and more favourable climate conditions and improved labour relations,” he said.

Government also further highlighted that in its discussions with business in the last few months, business has stressed the need for government to provide policy certainty.

Later today, Minister Gigaba alongside other Cabinet Ministers will brief the nation on details of the inclusive economic growth action plan. The briefing will take place at the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. – SAnews.gov.za