SACP Flag.gif

 

South African Communist Party, Press Statement, 30 August 2015

 

 

Hoisting the Red Flag!

 

Thirteenth Congress Central Committee

 

Thirteenth Plenary Session, Johannesburg, 28-30 August 2015

 

 

The SACP Central Committee met in Johannesburg over the weekend of 28-30
August. The CC was meeting in the context of serious storms gathering around
the South African economy, notably in the mining and steel sectors. We have
now experienced a single quarter of negative growth with the possibility of
an impending recession. These issues, their relationship to the problematic
structural features of South Africa's political economy, the ongoing global
capitalist crisis, and the impact of all of these on our society were,
therefore, the central focus of reports discussed in the CC. Comrade Bheki
Ntshalinthsali, acting COSATU general secretary, also presented a document
on the state of the labour federation and the challenges faced by the
working class.

 

We must deal with corruption not just in theory but practically

 

While the scourge of corruption is not by any measure the main cause of the
economic crises we are confronting as a country, corruption fragments the
democratic state and our movement, and opens up space for regime-change
agendas. If we are to respond effectively to the economic challenges, then
it is absolutely essential that as a movement we deal decisively with
corruption and corrupt individuals. In engaging with our allies in the
coming period we intend to raise this matter forcefully. There is a
wide-spread impression that congress and conference resolutions on fighting
corruption are watered down in practice, and the recommendations of
structures like the integrity committee are bypassed. Lip-service to
fighting corruption without action, or with half-hearted and selective
action, simply compounds the problem. It is important that those within our
movement who are aware of bribes passing hands, or membership fraud should
actively open up criminal cases, rather than simply repeat allegations.

 

Eskom

 

Clearly part of our current economic challenges have their roots in domestic
problems and strategic mistakes, and notably on the electricity front. It
would be a grave mistake to be in denial about these.

 

The SACP has consistently argued that our present energy challenges are
mainly the consequence of an ideologically misguided belief in the early
2000s that privatising Eskom would assure us of continued ample, cheap
electricity. The resulting failure to embark on a major re-capitalisation of
Eskom at that time has now cost us dearly. Compounding these problems has
been predatory behaviour in the supply chain management of Eskom. We welcome
decisive measures to eradicate corruption in the entity, as well as the
belated but important major investments in Eskom generation capacity now
underway. Unit 6 of Medupi power station comes on stream today and will be
providing an additional 794 megawatts into the grid.

 

The current economic storms largely originate from outside the country

 

However, our current economic challenges largely originate from outside of
the country. These challenges need to be traced back to the 2008 global
financial crisis which quickly developed into a wider economic crisis, the
most serious since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Between 2009 and 2012,
as with several other resource-rich economies, the South African economy was
partly shielded from the worst of the fall-out by continued export at record
prices of primary commodities to China.

 

However, in response to the global capitalist crisis which has seen a
slow-down in demand for its exports, China has shifted its strategy away
from being a mineral resource absorbing, export-led growth economy. It is
now focusing on stimulating domestic demand and moving away from its
commodity intensive growth path. The previous global commodity super-cycle,
driven by China's huge imports of primary commodities, is now definitively
over.  

 

This has seen prices of our major mining exports - iron ore, coal, platinum
and gold - fall by an average of 50% from 2011. In the last few years to
June 2015, the international iron ore price fell by 67%, coal prices by 54%,
platinum by 39%, and gold by 13%. These four sectors employ 425 000
mineworkers in South Africa, and they account for one-quarter of our
exports. With the collapse in commodity prices, 40% of South Africa's
platinum mines, and 30% of our gold mines are now not profitable.

 

But South Africa is not alone. The end of the global commodity super-cycle
is having a dramatic impact on other economies with major mining industries.
Some 20,000 jobs are under threat this coming year in Australia, whose
growth rate is also projected to decline. In the US, the mining sector lost
15,000 jobs in April alone - the fourth straight monthly loss in the sector.
Canada has lost 19,700 jobs in its resources sector. The commodity storm is
impacting on the other primary commodity rich-BRICS partners, Russia and
Brazil, both of which expect to be in recession this year. The former South
African but now trans-nationalised Anglo American has recently reported a $3
billion loss - mainly due to its flagship iron ore project in Minas Rio in
Brazil. Many oil-exporting African countries, Angola and Nigeria among them,
are also suffering major losses. The IMF last month downgraded growth
projections for sub-Saharan Africa by almost a full percentage point.

 

It is important to remind ourselves of this wider global reality - not in
order to evade our own national challenges or responsibilities - but rather
to more lucidly understand the challenges we are confronting, in order to
develop adequate and strategically sustainable responses. 

 

A great deal of local public commentary is shallow and parochial in the
extreme. For instance Peter Bruce argues there is "no leadership" in the
country, and proposes economic policy should be handed over to businessmen
who know only the mantra of profit maximisation. The DA's threadbare and
amateurish "5-point" programme in response to the current job losses calls
for government freebies to the private sector, like committing R500-million
of public money to purchase "industrial size generators for manufacturing
enterprises". The DA programme also calls for class war on the trade union
movement by arguing for a more "flexible" labour market. As Comrade
Ntshalintshali pointed out, less than 30% of South Africa's working class is
unionised (the majority of the unionised now being in the public sector) -
while informalisation, casualisation and labour brokering have accelerated
dramatically. Just how much more flexible does the DA want the labour market
to be? 

 

The steel glut

 

The slow-down in Chinese demand has also contributed to a glut of steel in
global markets, and the dumping of steel products from China into other
economies, including South Africa. South Africa's two major steel
manufacturers are now also in trouble.

In this context, the CC welcomed government's initiatives to meet with the
steel producers and the trade unions in the sector. The imposition of a
protective tariff on steel imports and the consideration of a further
anti-dumping duty are important immediate responses to the crisis. The CC in
particular saluted the role being played by Minister of Trade and Industry,
Comrade Rob Davies and Minister of Economic Development, Comrade Ebrahim
Patel. As both ministers have emphasised, the crisis must now be leveraged
to address the deeper structural challenges within our economy. Immediate
state interventions to bring relief to the mining and steel manufacturing
companies must now be linked to our strategic beneficiation and
re-industrialisation objectives. A tariff and anti-dumping duty relief to
steel-manufacturers must have as its conditionality that the price of steel
to local down-stream manufacturers is not hiked up.

 

This is a demand that has been resisted in the past by Arcelor-Mittal in
particular with its disastrous import parity pricing business practices -
now that it needs state assistance that assistance cannot be a freebie, it
must come with conditionalities. We must not only save jobs in the steel
foundries, but also save and indeed create jobs in downstream manufacturing.

 

The importance of re-industrialisation in order to address the structural
problems within our economy

 

The down-turn in mineral prices and the global glut of steel are not likely
to be short-term cyclical features. We are witnessing a fundamental
restructuring of the global economy, itself the response to the prolonged
global capitalist crisis. What this ongoing global crisis has laid bare is
South Africa's persisting colonial-type political economy and its excessive
vulnerabilities.

 

Between December 1993 and December 2014, 5% growth was achieved in only 17
of the 84 quarters. This growth was driven by two factors - credit-driven
consumption reliant on import intensive sectors; and the commodity price
super-cycle. The commodity price super-cycle is now definitively over and it
is unlikely to return any time soon, if ever. The credit-driven consumption
reliant on imports has resulted in excessive financialisation, high levels
of household debt, and de-industrialisation, affecting primarily our
manufacturing and agro-processing sectors.  

 

We must actively use the current challenges to leverage structural change
within our economy - a fundamentally patriotic process of making our
political economy more robust and sheltering it from the excessive frailties
and vulnerabilities from which it currently suffers. A critical component of
such a strategy must be the scaling up and intensification of our Industrial
Policy Action Plan (IPAP).

 

There is a great deal of cynicism in some parts of the business media in
regard to industrial policy programmes. Yet significant real progress has
been made in at least two sectors. In the auto sector R25,7-billion
investments have been made - the highest ever level in South Africa. These
investments are not just in car assembly, but also in minibuses, buses and
heavy vehicles, as well as in an expansion of the components sector.

 

Six years ago, South Africa's clothing and textile sector was in free-fall
and close to extinction. Thanks to state, trade union and management
engagements, and thanks to a shift in incentives that now focus on credits
for competitive-enhancing investment there has been a remarkable
turn-around, with 68,000 jobs saved and a further 6,900 new jobs created.

 

In short, it is possible to make significant progress in difficult
circumstances. We now need to scale up our re-industrialisation efforts,
with a particular emphasis on labour intensive sectors like agro-processing.
These are among the key perspectives we hope to carry forward into the ANC's
important National General Council in October.

 

Taking forward the financial sector campaign

 

A core feature of the problematic structure of South Africa's political
economy is its excessive financialisation. South Africa is an extreme case
among middle income economies in terms of the relative proportion of
short-term speculative investments (equity) relative to fixed direct
investment (bonds). Between 1994 and 2002, inflows into the South African
stock market relative to GDP were ten times the norm for middle income
economies.

 

Internationally, South Africa is also exceptional in terms of the size of
the JSE relative to GDP. Of the 118 countries that reported on market
capitalisation in the World Bank's World Development Indicators for 2010,
only in Hong Kong did stock market capitalisation exceed the value of the
GDP by more than South Africa.

 

We have a bloated, top-heavy financial sector, dominated by four banks
(accounting for 84,1% of total banking assets at the end of 2011). What is
more, half our banking shares are foreign owned. The financial sector has
exerted huge influence on post-apartheid, macro-economic policy, and it has
been behind the problematic, credit-fuelled consumption led growth path over
the past two decades. Our over-financialised economy results in the
misallocation of finances into speculative activity at the expense of
productive investment. Financialisation and de-industrialisation are two
sides of the same coin.

 

One of the unintended consequences of the 2005 National Credit Act was a
massive increase in unsecured lending. In seeking to regulate unsecured
lending in the informal sector, the Act opened up unsecured lending to the
mainstream financial sector. The banks themselves became mashonisa (loan
sharks) and they worked in tandem with retailers like Ellerines and Lewis
Furniture Stores (who themselves increasingly drew profit not from mark-ups
on furniture, for instance, but on selling credit, insurance, etc.).
Unsecured lending ballooned from R40bn in 2008 to R172bn in 2014. In March
2015 45% of South Africa's 23-million credit-active consumers were three or
more months in arrears.

 

As researcher David Neves has remarked, the business models for credit
provision to South Africa's low-income market, in particular, have been
based less on the borrower's ability to repay, and more on the creditor's
ability to collect. An extensive machinery of debt collection and of
repossessions has, accordingly, mushroomed and, along with it, all manner of
abuses.

 

The recent Western Cape High Court case, for instance, exposed grave
predatory irregularity behaviour by debt collectors, credit providers, and
magistrate courts, using emolument attachment orders (EAOs) - "garnishee
orders". The court found that EAOs were granted illegally by magistrate
courts distant from where those affected live and work. Amounts deducted
sometimes amounted to over 80% of the earnings, whereas the law requires
judicial oversight to ensure affordability. These and other practices appear
to be widespread.

 

Another symptom of the crisis of excessive financialisation is the tsunami
of home repossessions and evictions. It is estimated that there are now over
10,000 evictions a year in South Africa - a figure which is comparable to
the numbers affected at the height of the apartheid-era group areas
removals. Here again there is much evidence of abusive practices with clerks
of the court, Red Ants, unscrupulous estate agents, and even staff within
the major banks working collusively to illegally evict thousands of
families. SACP activists in Johannesburg, working with community members,
have actively been taking up these issues, and plan soon to take up a
housing class action case. The SACP, in taking up these issues will also
seek a meeting with relevant sections of the criminal justice system,
including the judiciary, to raise some of our concerns in this regard.  

 

This is the context in which, as a key pillar of this year's Red October
Campaign, the SACP will be working with its alliance partners and a wide
range of social movements and community based formations to revitalise the
Financial Sector Campaign. We are calling for a second NEDLAC-convened
Financial Sector Summit. The first summit in 2003 resulted in a Financial
Sector Charter in which, amongst other things, the financial sector
institutions committed to significant community investment, including into
affordable housing. Most of the commitments made in that Charter were to be
realised or achieved by 2015.  A second summit will need to assess the
degree to which commitments have actually been implemented.

 

In the build-up to a Financial Sector Summit, the SACP and its allies will
intensify mobilisation against housing evictions, unjust credit bureau
listings, bank charges, reckless lending, abuse of garnishee orders, and the
abuse of loan sharks especially of social grant beneficiaries. As part of
the campaign, we will also call for the stabilisation of the SA Post Office
and the allocation of a full banking licence to the Post Bank.

 

On COSATU

 

The CC congratulated COSATU on the convening and outcome of its Special
National Congress at a difficult time for the federation. In the light of
all of the above challenges, a militant and independent COSATU, working
together with its alliance partners, has an absolutely critical role to
play. We call on all affiliates to focus on re-building active trade
unionism that services members and to work for working class unity. It is
also essential that the historical policy capacity of the Federation and its
affiliates in critical areas like industrialisation is once more actively
revived. Without a united and capacitated COSATU, it is the working class in
South Africa that will become the main victims of the present capitalist
crisis.

 

Capitalism is in crisis

 

While it is imperative to develop short-term interventions to save jobs, to
address crisis levels of house-hold indebtedness, and much more, we must
never lose sight of the deeply embedded structural features of the current
capitalist crisis both within South Africa and globally. Since 2008 the
epicentre of the global capitalist crisis has shifted from Wall Street to
Iceland, from Ireland and Portugal, to Greece and Puerto Rico, to the
Chinese stock markets. One "solution" after another simply results in
further knock-on crises elsewhere. 

 

Everywhere the rural poor, the working class, and vast stretches of the
middle strata globally are suffering, while a one-percent rentier class
becomes ever more filthy rich. The scandalous deaths of tens of thousands of
desperate refugees in the Mediterranean and in Europe - fleeing poverty and
imperialist inspired destabilisation in Syria, Libya, and elsewhere - is
another manifestation of the deepening crisis of capitalism.

 

Capitalism is in crisis - our task is not to save capitalism from its
crisis, but to save humanity and the planet from capitalism

 

The CC conveys its condolences to the families and friends of the 109
victims of three terrible road accidents in the Eastern Cape and Swaziland
over this weekend.

 


Contact:

Alex Mohubetswane Mashilo: National Spokesperson, Head Of Communications
Mobile: 082 9200 308
Office: 011 339 3621/2
Twitter: SACP1921
Website: WWW.SACP.ORG.ZA <http://www.sacp.org.za/> 
Facebook Page: South African Communist Party
SACP Ustream TV Channel: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/sacp-tv

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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