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The Ramaphosa presidency: constraints and choices

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Photo: The Presidency of the Republic of South Africa
Photo: The Presidency of the Republic of South Africa

By Raymond Suttner

As one watches the unfolding of the Cyril Ramaphosa presidency one sees the care taken in preparing almost every gesture and presentation that he has made. This may be characterised as “show”, for example walkabouts, but these have simultaneously borne a message of a presidency and government that aims to be closer to the people.

The State of the Nation address (SONA) was very impressively prepared and presented and showed considerable awareness of the concerns of people from a range of sectors. It spoke to the longing that South Africans have for some sense of certainty and predictability in their lives. The areas on which Ramaphosa chose to focus were key features that need attention, in order to put the dark Jacob Zuma years behind us.

With regard to substance, there is a change, though there has not been time to see whether the frameworks for realisation will be adequate. Also, in some cases, practices that inhibit such reform are still alive and well and will be difficult to combat.

In the weeks after his election to the ANC presidency, before becoming state president, one had the sense that Ramaphosa was already in the presidency (as opposed to his relatively minor role when deputy president). Some steps were taken by law enforcement agencies that were unlikely to have happened during the Zuma period. This has continued with the clampdown on Gupta businesses and the warrants for the arrest of two Gupta brothers, the charging of some associates and the probability of further cases. At the same time, there are continued police lapses, as with the Gupta brothers and Duduzane Zuma apparently being allowed to leave the country.

We do not yet know what appetite Ramaphosa has to tackle the challenges he faces, and to what extent he can do this without undermining his qualified support base, many of whom expect to be rewarded and to continue to “eat”.

Inherited debt

Whatever Ramaphosa may intend to do and see happen is markedly constrained by the burden of debt that was accumulated during the Zuma era, partly through wrongdoing but also partly by cavalier treatment of the fiscus, notably in what was to be one of his parting shots, Zuma’s announcement of  free higher education for substantial numbers.  Over three years this is projected to cost R57-billion more than the already huge national debt. That debt has increased from 31.1 percent GDP in 2009 to an expected 52.1 percent in this financial year. 

The debt was further increased by the underperforming of SARS, with a shortfall of R 48.2-billion. Under the leadership of Tom Moyane, SARS has lost key individuals allegedly part of a “rogue unit”, now shown to be fictitious. Other experienced employees were also forced out. “In late 2017 SARS was forced to admit to Parliament,” writes journalist Pauli van Wyk, “that the service has lost 506 employees since the start of 2017, a figure culminating in a cumulative 7,479 years of experience.”  That purge can now be seen to be a proxy for some of the battles to open the fiscus as part of “state capture.”  At the same time, individuals like Moyane’s deputy, Jonas Makwakwa, who was alleged to have made numerous suspicious deposits, was cleared in a very flawed disciplinary hearing.  

Inherited culture of stealing and patronage

There is now a widespread culture of stealing in the government. Patronage preceded the onset of Zuma’s presidency, and does not always amount to illegality, rather than preference given to those whose support one needs. But patronage and corruption often converge.

Addressing these patterns of behaviour or practices is not easy. This is not like reallocating a budget but changing cultural patterns that are now deeply embedded in a range of institutions - in thegovernment and also the private sector. It is found in national government, where the ANC is the ruling party. But there is also increasing evidence in DA-run councils, now part of the accusations flying in intra-DA battles related to the future of Patricia de Lille as mayor of Cape Town.

It is also very much part of party-political functioning, especially but not exclusively documented in the case of the ANC, that people expect to be rewarded, if necessary illegally, for their support.

This is the environment within which Ramaphosa starts his presidency, and it is daunting. If he has the desire and capacity to change this, how will such action impact on his support base? Is he willing to take the risk of losing an already ambiguous level of support within the ANC?

Inherited, crippled institutions, hollowed out

Many institutions and state departments that are crucial for delivering a “better life to all” are themselves crippled and casualties of the wholesale looting that characterised the corruption of the Zuma period as well as the more systemic form of corruption entailed in state capture. These resources needed for a range of projects and for economic growth and development have diminished substantially.

But the institutional effect of state capture has gone beyond conventional corruption and made irregular forms of functioning the “new norm”.  It will be necessary to flush out a range of people on a number of levels, in SOEs but also the government departments that assisted them. 

There will need to be careful measures instituted to establish/re-establish the type of governance that is required for each institution, with appropriate monitoring. Given the nine-year presidency of Zuma and that he built on some tendencies that were already present, will it be possible to achieve clean government, regularised administration of the SOEs and also the civil service in the short run?  How long is the long run?  What happens in the meantime, what steps can be taken to prevent some people taking advantage of gaps that may be there, in order to still enrich themselves, at the expense of the fiscus?

The budget and realignment towards the poor

The first budget, one week after Ramaphosa’s becoming president has been one bearing the imprint of the pillage of resources from the Zuma period.  Regrettably, the high levels of debt in which South Africa finds itself has led rating agencies to have an inordinate influence on what is said to comprise desirable state spending and taxation.  That increased vat instead of corporate taxes was chosen to address the debt, sent a signal that makes sense to “the markets” and rating agencies but has a different type of meaning to those living in squalor and without jobs. 

That some items are zero-rated does not impair the marked negative effect of a VAT increase on the poor, who do not consider only zero-rated goods part of their needs.
Thoko Madonko and Gilad Isaacs argue that corporate and wealth taxes and other elements of the income of the wealthy could have been a better target, without further burdening the poor: 

The budget also cuts back over R85-billion in government spending. This is not simply trimming off fat. It will have a negative impact on local government, community development in general, affecting low cost housing, school buildings and other infrastructure, transport services and maintenance of provincial roads.  

Security and policing

While the NPA and Hawks have shown some signs of movement on state capture in recent weeks, that the Guptas and Duduzane Zuma were apparently allowed to move out of the country despite being suspects, creates the possibility that it will be a very long process before they can be brought to trial.   

The ongoing KwaZulu-Natal, killings, in which the police and ANC politicians are alleged to be accomplices, does not seem to have created any sense of a need to explain and answer satisfactorily to the Moerane Commission, on the part of the police.

In short, the security services have become accustomed to acting without accountability and selectively.  Ramaphosa will need to act but it is a dangerous terrain and requires a combination of delicacy and firmness. 

Ramaphosa’s affability and the question of legitimacy

Some have sought to dwell on Ramaphosa’s personal wealth as a reason why he is himself seen to be an obstacle in the way of the type of change that is required.  Personally, I do not see why that is necessarily the case.  Provided he operates on a democratic basis with people who are dedicated to their jobs, what his personal wealth may be is not necessarily a barrier to a transformative project.  The task at the moment is to win support for stabilising and regularising state functioning. Business has bought in but Ramaphosa needs to understand that workers and the poor cannot embrace this with the same enthusiasm where they see a budget that is so skewed against them.

In saying that, I am aware, that however undesirable it may be, the power of the markets and rating agencies is a reality and a vulnerable economy cannot dismiss their concerns. But in the calculations over what ought to happen in the next few years, it is important that once, or if, investor confidence is restored, that the bias that is found is modified and a more pro-poor formula is found.

It is also true that the ANC that Ramaphosa represents and the support base he enjoys comprises a compromise between looters and those who wish to clean up. This constrains what Ramaphosa can do. He needs to work with a team committed to rebuild the ANC if it is to be part of resolving the urgent issues of the day. Unfortunately, what is urgent cannot always be tackled with speed, given the configuration of forces at play.

In much of the hostility that persists towards Ramaphosa the Marikana massacre looms large.  It would be important for his leadership and the families of those who were killed and injured that he breaks the deadlock in the negotiations over a settlement  and ensures that families are properly compensated.

From the moment of his election as ANC president Ramaphosa had to deal with an uneven level of support within the organisation.  Equally, whatever he and his supporters may wish to achieve in terms of redress is constrained by the vulnerability of the economy.  Stabilisation measures are necessary, as was the case in the early 1990s when the controversial Growth, employment and redistribution (GEAR) macroeconomic policy was introduced. The question then and now is whether the government uses what room it does have in order to do more to assist those who have yet to benefit from post-apartheid South Africa. 

Raymond Suttner is a scholar and political analyst. He is a visiting professor and strategic advisor to the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities, University of Johannesburg, a professor attached to UNISA and (until the end of March) Rhodes University. He served lengthy periods in prison and house arrest for underground and public anti-apartheid activities. His most recent book, Inside Apartheid’s Prison, was reissued in 2017. He blogs at raymondsuttner.com and his twitter handle is @raymondsuttner

Source: http://www.enca.com/opinion/the-ramaphosa-presidency-constraints-and-choices