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*Umsebenzi Online Volume 21, No. 02, 16 February 2022*

*Online voice of the South African working-class*

*In this issue*

   - The state has a key role to play in South Africa



*Red Alert*

*The state has a key role to play in South Africa*
[image: Red Alert.gif]

*Umsebenzi Online*

In his State of the Nation Address he delivered in Cape Town on Thursday,
11 February 2022, President Cyril Ramaphosa asserted that “We all know that
government does not create jobs. Business creates jobs”. The SACP[i]
<#_edn1> characterised the assertion as fatally flawed. In this
intervention we briefly reflect on two flaws regarding the assertion. The
first is neo-liberalism, the roots of the assertion. The second flaw lies
in the inconsistency of the assertion in relation to the South African
reality in its historical context.

*Neo-liberalism*

To start with, the “We all” in the assertion is not inclusive. It is
exclusive to those who subscribe to the ideology of neo-liberalism to which
the assertion can be traced. Its roots date to classical liberalism, which
in the 19th century developed into neo-classical liberalism. In 1929 to
1933, there was a major crisis. Called the Great Depression, the crisis
dealt a blow to many assumptions the right-wing ideology propagated.

At the end of the 1930s, to be specific in 1939, World War II broke out.
After the war, which ended in 1945, a different current emerged, including
economic regulation, with the state playing a key, and in many respects
also a leading, role in driving economic reconstruction and development.
This period, which was among others characterised by high economic and
employment growth, would later be known in economic history as the “Golden
Age”. During this period, one of the major influences within the framework
of capitalist production, especially in Western Europe, came from
Keynesianism.

Neoliberalism emerged in the 1970s and intensified afterwards in response
to the endemic crisis of the capitalist mode of production. Regarding this,
in his book titled the *Unholy Trinity: The IMF, World Bank and WTO*[ii]
<#_edn2>, Richard Peet, a Professor of Geography at Clark University noted:

“Neoliberalism relates positively to its nineteenth century ancestor, but
critically to its twentieth-century predecessor, especially social
democratic Keynesianism. So the classical liberal past is remembered in the
neoliberal present not merely as received wisdom, but also through a series
of creative re-enactments that respond to changed circumstances. Hence
contemporary neoliberalism’s obsession with the deregulation of private
enterprise and the privatization of previously state-run enterprises, this
time in critical reaction to Keynesian social democracy rather than
liberalism’s earlier reaction to mercantilism.” (p. 9)

The neo-liberal agenda pushed liberalisation and a host of other measures
coalescing around weakening, withdrawing or uprooting state participation
in the economy, to replace it with competition by private wealth
accumulation interests. This is what of late those pushing the agenda refer
to as “modernisation”. State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs), the industrial
spaces and/or the infrastructure networks that they control are among the
key targets of penetration or capture by the private wealth accumulation
interests served by neo-liberalism.

*The state and employment in South Africa in its historical context—the
synopsis *

Before we proceed on this score, let us first acknowledge that there is
significant private sector employment in South Africa, but that this does
not mean that the state does not create employment. The state creates
employment through policy as well as, as we highlight, through direct
participation in the economy. It is also important to underline what the
SACP said.

Workers find work in profit-driven businesses only so long as their labour
increases capital for accumulation by their owners. This is one of the
drivers of economic exploitation and inequality. It is also a reason those
businesses retrench workers not only to build profitability but also to
maximise profits. In the second quarter of 2020, for instance, 2.2 million
workers were retrenched in South Africa, in the face of the global COVID-19
pandemic when they desperately needed work and income security.

Therefore, not only does profit-driven business create employment to
facilitate private wealth accumulation by its owners, on the one hand, but
also creates and increases unemployment in defence of the same agenda, on
the other hand. A state that does not intervene in this scenario does not
have the interests of the majority of its people, the working-class,
including the unemployed, at heart.

Successive oppressor regimes that dominated South Africa through
colonialism and apartheid before 1994 created and expanded state
participation in the economy, including in the productive sector. To name
but a few, the following SOEs were created before 1994, namely Iscor (one
of the largest steel manufacturers), the South African Broadcasting
Corporation widely known as the SABC, the Land and Development Bank of
South Africa also known as the Land Bank, the Industrial Development
Corporation of South Africa also known as the IDC, Eskom, the Development
Bank of Southern Africa also known as the DBSA, the South African Airways
also known as the SAA, the Airports Company of South Africa also known as
Acsa, Denel, the South African Forestry Company also known as Safco, and
Telkom.

Besides through government and other state services, at all levels, through
these and other SOEs, the state both DIRECTLY created employment and
supported investment in the economy. These and other SOEs also played a key
role in skills development, producing multi-skilled artisans, technicians,
engineers and other critical skills through apprenticeships, experiential
training and other workplace training programmes.

The problem during the colonial and apartheid era is that the state, which
oppressed and marginalised the black majority, was racist and based on this
placed supporting its white constituency base above all else. Both through
policy and direct participation in the economy, the regime focused on
addressing the plight of the white workers and meeting the capital
accumulation or investment requirements of the white bourgeoisie, both
Afrikaner and British, who supported and in turn benefited from their
support of the regime.

After 1994 there were affirmative action changes. Although these changes
are still far from realising the vision of non-racialism and non-sexism,
looked at in its totality, the reality is that the state is still creating
employment in South Africa by employing many workers in national,
provincial and municipal SOEs, agencies, other public establishments and
institutions, including public colleges, universities, and related
institutions.

 It is also a fact, as the SACP said, that from a value chain perspective
every person employed in a tender or contract awarded by the state or a
public entity, that person is in a state created employment. These workers
are among those included in the disaggregated private sector employment
figures ideologically thrown around. Going forward, the disaggregation is
crucial for the state to communicate the real picture regarding employment
creation in South Africa.

State participation in the South African economy after 1994 increasingly
came under attack from the neo-liberal policy regime comprising among other
measures privatisation (continuing where the apartheid regime left when it
realised that its days were numbered), outsourcing, and deprivation of
adequate recapitalisation, through fiscal policy. If truth be told, the
democratic government must actually be worried because, compared to the
colonial and apartheid regimes, it has failed to build and increase state
participation in the economy as part of its strategies to address the
plight of its constituencies.

This is the context in which, besides global crises such as the global
COVID-19 pandemic, there are approximately 12.5 million unemployed active
and discouraged work-seekers in South Africa, of whom the overwhelming
majority is black, women and youth, with Africans the worst affected. It is
also in this context, compounded by state capture and other forms of
corruption, that a gulf of social and political distance has emerged
between the ANC as the governing party based on the performance of the
government (on crucial aspects such as employment creation) and the
historical constituency that has previously voted for the ANC to win
elections. This gulf is evident in the declining electoral support of the
ANC. If this scenario continues, the ANC will be dislodged as the governing
party in more areas and in other spheres of the government than in the
municipalities it has already lost power.

The masses cannot identify with the neo-liberal language that has become
dominant in the vocabulary of the leaders, which is driven by the National
Treasury and the Reserve Bank, and now transmitted by the President, such
as that the state does not create employment. The private sector in South
Africa is still predominately controlled in ownership terms by those who
benefitted from apartheid in relation to its domestic composition. It is to
the private wealth accumulation interests, in the prevailing environment of
overwhelmingly untransformed patterns of ownership, that the message coming
out refers the unemployed to look for work, telling the masses it is not
the state that creates employment.

The workers also want ownership in the economy, not just work to enrich
others in their profit-driven business. The state, like the owners of
private businesses, is not in terms of our constitution prohibited from
property rights. It has a key role to play in empowering the masses who
have no capital of their own to develop ownership in the economy, including
through developing a thriving co-operative sector. The co-operative sector
that was developed under the colonial and apartheid era was developed to
serve their constituencies.









------------------------------

[i] <#_ednref1> SACP initial response to the State of the Nation Address
(Cape Town, 11 February 2022)
https://www.sacp.org.za/content/sacp-initial-response-state-nation-address

[ii] <#_ednref2> First published in 2003 by Zed Books in London, the United
Kingdom.

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