RESPONSE TO COMRADE NETSHITENZHE ON NATIONALISATION 
Floyd Shivambu

Since the release of the discussion document on Nationalisation of Mines at
the end of January 2010, the ANC Youth League has received satisfactory
levels of constructive engagement with the entire perspective. The inputs,
particularly from renowned academics, public intellectuals, members of the
ANC, the alliance, and importantly ordinary people at grassroots level are
particularly appreciated. They are appreciated because most did not only
identify the problems and weaknesses in the perspective, but provided
concrete solutions on how a better and more effective method of mines'
nationalisation should be ushered in by the democratic State. This does not
however mean that there were no detractors, who sought to divert our
attention from the strategic questions raised in the perspective. 

Now the input by Comrade Joel Netshitenzhe is not part of detractors, but
represents a conservative ideological wave in the ANC. This ideological wave
oddly believes that some of the tactical retreats taken upon transition by
the ANC-led liberation movement constituted total capitulation. The wave has
been dominant in the state since the democratic breakthrough in 1994, and
pretends oblivion to the reality that whilst commendable, ANC's efforts to
transfer wealth to the ownership of the people as a whole have not been
adequate to decisively break the racial, class and gender dialectic of
colonial-cum-apartheid repression. This ideological wave begun from the
premise that the colonial economy and spatial development patterns did not
need to be radically changed, but polished with a hollow hope that it might
make today better than yesterday. 

This ideological wave underpinned the adoption of the Growth, Employment and
Redistribution (GEAR) strategy, which achieved some level of fiscal
stability, yet dismally failed to achieve its own strategic
objectives-mainly economic growth levels, investments and creation of jobs.
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), recently observed that "at
least between the years 1995 - 2000, for which there is adequate
data-economic growth was associated with declining incomes across households
at all income levels, but with the sharpest income declines occurring among
the least well off" (1). The ideological wave further underpins a national
spatial development perspective that basically says much attention, efforts
and resources should be dedicated to apartheid centres of economic
potential, whilst other areas are reserved as suppliers of labour and
natural resources.

In its official input to the ANC Youth League's perspective on
Nationalisation of Mines, the Congress of South African Trade Unions
(COSATU) observes this ideological wave and says it had "sought to present
the historical approach of the ANC as some form of social democracy,
inserted to address a colonial situation.  The economic ideology that
underpins this tendency finds expression in a watered down version of the
interpretation of the Freedom Charter.  They present to the current
generation of the membership of our movement, and the people of South Africa
as a whole, what can be characterized as Freedom Charter Lite-a Freedom
Charter without class content.  We therefore congratulate the ANC Youth
League for re-affirming a consistently democratic interpretation that people
who gathered in Kliptown in 1955 gave to the economic clause of the Freedom
Charter" (2). The ANC Youth League welcomes the congratulations and
re-affirms that the Freedom Charter will never be hijacked by anyone for
whatever narrow purpose. 

Consistent with the broader thrust of the ANC's strategic vision as
contained in the Freedom Charter, the ANC Youth League's perspective on
Nationalisation of Mines represents a decisive break from the not so neutral
ideological disposition, which underpinned the first 16 years of democracy.
Why? Such has to be the case because efforts to decisively break the
unemployment and poverty challenges have not substantially succeeded under
the policy trajectory which Comrade Joel argues should be retained. It is
not an overstatement that whilst a considerable progress has been recorded
in the empowerment of historically disadvantaged individuals, the broader
thrust of the Freedom Charter's objective for the people to share the
country's wealth has not been attained. 

The ANC 52nd National Conference in Polokwane proclaimed that "Our vision of
the economic transformation takes as its starting point the Freedom
Charter's clarion call that the People Shall Share in the Country's
Wealth!". The conference further resolved to build "a developmental state
[which] must ensure that our national resource endowments, including land,
water, minerals and marine resources are exploited to effectively maximise
the growth, development and employment potential embedded in such national
assets and not purely for profit maximisation". Now as part of giving
practical meaning to these resolutions, the ANC Youth League proposes the
democratic government's nationalisation of Mines in order to achieve what
Polokwane said we should strive for.

Comrade Joel Netshitenzhe could give a conservative interpretation and
meaning to Polokwane resolutions, yet the ANC Youth League's understanding
is that they call upon the ANC government to make sure that the mineral
resources are used to benefit all people, not few corporations. The ANC
Youth League's straightforward interpretation of the Polokwane resolution is
that there ought to be greater State participation in the economy. Polokwane
took these resolutions in appreciation of the reality that the status quo is
not desirable and should be changed. We are also aware that attempts to
misinterpret the Freedom Charter have recurrently failed and will never
succeed under our guard of the revolution. The perspective on
Nationalisation of Mines dedicated adequate time and space on how the ANC
understood the transfer of mineral wealth to the ownership of the people as
a whole and such has not changed.

In the first public lecture on nationalisation of mines organised by the ANC
Youth League in Atlas studios, Auckland Park in October 2009, two members of
the audience, Mining & Metallurgy students from the University of
Johannesburg made two outstanding observations. The first student remarked
that it is so strange that a security guard in the coal mines of Emalahleni
got arrested for taking 25 kilograms of coal, whilst the mines steal coal
everyday in loads and loads of trucks and transport it to Richards Bay,
whilst ordinary people around the coal mines do not benefit from the coal.
The second student remarked that she decided to study Mining Metallurgy
because her home town, Sekhukhune had lots of mining opportunities, yet she
could not get any access to opportunities from the mines just across where
she resides, as those who worked at the mines said she should travel to
Rustenburg or Johannesburg if she wanted opportunities.

Unlike those who were around Mpanza, ingwenya in Makeni, Lusaka, our
concerns are not about abstractions of whether nationalised mines will lead
to socialism or not, but inspired by the objective suffering of our people
and the opportunities which young people do not get in the democratic
dispensation. Our concern is the reality that the colonial features of the
South African economy are still vivid, exporting virtually all natural
resources and importing finished goods and products, but also enriching the
white minority at the expense of the black majority. As youth, we know that
South Africa produces platinum group metals and is home to more than 70% of
the world reserves, yet most of us do not know how platinum looks like and
what it is used for. Statistics recurrently point to the reality that black
people and Africans in particular do not own anything above 5% of South
Africa's wealth, yet they constitute more than 80% of the South African
population. As we have argued in the ANCYL document, this does not mean that
this wealth should be transferred to a few black elite. On the contrary, the
public ownership and control, institutionalised through the state will
enable the people to determine the production and distribution of our
wealth.

Comrade Joel Netshitenzhe observes that the ANC's interpretation of the
Freedom Charter has neither been static, nor homogeneous, yet argues that
the ANC Youth League's view on Nationalisation is inconsistent with the
latter day interpretations of the Freedom Charter. It can never be correct
that anything that does not agree with Comrade Joel Netshitenzhe's
interpretation of the Freedom Charter is counted outside the ANC's official
positions. It is a misleading and sad reflection because our reading of the
Freedom Charter is consistent with how the ANC viewed it upon adoption in
1955 by the real Congress of the People and in 1956 by the ANC, wherein
there were racialised inequalities alongside massive mineral wealth
controlled by few conglomerates. Indeed the Freedom Charter was adopted in
1955 amidst massive inequalities and economic subjugation of the black
majority and Africans in particular, and the reality is that 55 years later,
such has not changed. Attempts to substitute the Freedom Charter have always
existed in the ANC and our generation vows that such can only be considered
once the entirety of the Freedom Charter objectives and aims are realised.

It is our considered view that an absolute majority of South Africans agree
with the nationalisation of mines, which should be directed towards the
betterment of people's lives and creation of decent employment for all. What
seems to worry many commentators is the question of State capacity to manage
and administer mines as state owned enterprises. Recurrently, a concern is
raised around the perceived and/or real administrative challenges and
glitches in ESKOM, SAA, and SABC. Worrying though is that a rather lame
conclusion is made that because these institutions had problems, glitches
and sometimes board squabbles; the state is generally incapable of managing
corporations. This observation is sad and ignores the substantial factors
relating to the management of state owned enterprises and their relationship
with the state as a principle.

What is relieving amidst these observations is the fact that that the
discussion document on nationalisation of mines foresaw the potential
opposition to nationalisation on the basis of a supposition that the state
is inherently incapable of managing corporations. In the document, the ANC
Youth League said, "The State capacity to manage enterprises is doubted,
often in comparison to the State's oversight or lack thereof of key State
owned enterprises such as the South African Airways (SAA), ESKOM, SABC and
Denel. The comparison is not fair because in most instances, these have
failed due to sheer criminality, mismanagement and patronage which
characterised the most of these entities and very weak accountability
systems. The capacity of the State to decisively intervene in SAA and ESKOM
for instance was inhibited by lack of proper systems and legislative
framework concerning the extent of interventions the State can make
alongside Boards of Directors". More often than not, the State's only role
in these enterprises is appointment of Boards with no clearly defined
developmental mandates.

Further than that, all the state owned enterprises that are said to have
failed were purely run on private sector principles, wherein progress and
success is measured as per the profit margins, instead of concrete
developmental outcomes such as employment creation and infrastructure
investments. Concerning this aspect, the discussion document on
nationalisation says that "the State Owned Mining Company's progress should
be measured as per its ability, capacity and coherent determination to
create jobs, maximisation of the country's gain from mineral resources,
contribution to socio-economic development and assistance of communities
where mining happens". This is one principle that should guide all state
owned enterprises and it finds adequate resonance in the ANC's 52nd National
Conference resolution that commits to "strengthening the role of state-owned
enterprises and ensuring that, whilst remaining financially viable, SOEs,
agencies and utilities - as well as companies in which the state has
significant shareholding - respond to a clearly defined public mandate and
act in terms of our overarching industrial policy and economic
transformation objectives" (3).

In the process of questioning the state's capacity to manage and oversee
corporations, there is also some level of neo-liberal hypocrisy that is
defined by a deliberate oblivion to the successes recorded in the SOE
established by the post 1994 democratic government . The Petroleum, Oil and
Gas Corporation of South Africa (Pty) Limited (PetroSA) owns, operates and
manages South Africa's commercial assets in the petroleum industry. Whilst
legislated in the 1940s, PetroSA was officially established and given
strategic leadership by the democratic government, run at board and
management level by historically disadvantaged individuals, and is currently
the country's most successful petroleum corporation, even in comparison to
privately owned petroleum corporations.

Despite infiltrating a highly competitive market, PetroSA is in the
forefront of expanding South Africa's capacity to refine oil. The 100% State
owned PetroSA is currently using cutting-edge technology to establish a 400
000 barrel per day oil refinery (Project Mthombo) in Coega Industrial
Development Zone in the Eastern Cape. The oil refinery has potential to
create than 10 000 jobs for the people of the Eastern Cape and open lots of
other upstream and downstream economic opportunities. Neo-liberals opposed
to state ownership will not mention this reality because in their
neo-liberal text books, innovation is solely a function of private
ownership.

If there is ever any balanced comparison on how successful a State Owned
Mining Company should be run, that comparison should be with PetroSA,
because PetroSA trades with commodities in a highly competitive environment.
The SOEs that are said to have failed are often said to have failed because
of their internal management squabbles. But also the failed SOEs operate on
private sector principles of narrow profit maximisation at the expense of
everything else. Then the detractors of nationalisation of mines will raise
false alarms and forever make lame attempts to link state ownership with
inherent inefficiency and corruption. The collapse of the economy globally
happened as a result of narrow capital accumulation models pursued by
privately owned corporations, and they all relied on public finance for
revival and sustainability. It appears that the neo-liberals who want to
rubbish the role of the state in the economy only choose a handful of state
owned enterprises that encountered difficulties and ignore the successes of
ACSA and PetroSA. Efficiency of enterprises is not a function of
shareholding, but a consequence of a variety of both subjective and
objective conditions under which businesses operate.

The ANC Youth League accepts that in the management of vital economic
resources such as minerals, a need will certainly arise for strong
accountability systems and legislative guidelines of how mines are operated,
buttressed by strong public accountability mechanisms. With the lessons
derived from SAA, ESKOM, DENEL, and countries that are in minerals
extraction partnerships, South Africa is suitably located to
institutionalise a more effective, efficient and durable mechanism, systems
and legislative framework to manage mines more efficiently. So the
challenges of SAA and ESKOM should not serve as a discouragement to the
State's control and ownership of mines, but as a lesson of what should be
done moving forward, particularly that mines nationalisation has lots of
other benefits as argued in the document.

In a previous intervention and response to this conservative ideological
current in the ANC, we argued that the question of when we nationalise Mines
should be interrogated within the context of dialectical materialism, not
through raising of false alarms intending at causing panic amongst
revolutionaries in the cause of a National Democratic Revolution. In
Philosophy and Class Struggle, Dialego says, "if we stress the materialist
component of our philosophy at the expense of the dialectical, the result
will not be ultra-leftism but its twin opposite - right-wing opportunism:
the tendency to overestimate the strength of the enemy so that the
superficial appearances of the moment are mistaken for the deeper trends at
work in historical reality. Indeed, legalistic illusions which stem from an
insufficiently dialectical approach to politics, may even lead to the kind
of unprincipled compromises which make short term gains, but weaken the
movement as a whole" (4).

Encountered with a bigger difficulty of a per se underdeveloped nation and
almost non-existent socialist consciousness amongst the few workers in
Russia in the early 1900s, Vladimir Lenin never raised false alarms. He was
instead inspired by the existent conditions and documented a clear programme
titled "What is to be done?" Lenin never asked "Should we do something"; nor
did he ask "whether conditions are favourable for something to be done". As
a revolutionary, he documented a clear programme on what was going to happen
and virtually all of the things he said were to be done happened. He
understood that as a revolutionary, you do not fold your arms and wait for
the balance of forces to be in your favour, but should work towards ensuring
that balance of forces are in your favour.

The conditions in our country are currently favourable to a revolutionary
programme and that is conclusively objective. Affirming this observation,
the ANC Strategy & Tactics says, "Overall, since 1994, the balance of forces
has shifted in favour of the forces of change. It provides the basis for
speedier implementation of programmes to build a truly democratic and
prosperous society. The legal and policy scaffolding for this is essentially
in place. Most of society wants this to happen". Various other objective
conditions provide reason why we have an adequate space to could move
decisively on altering property relations. The people are already on the
streets protesting for better lives, the ANC should mobilise the whole of
our people and refocus their struggles to be directed towards real economic
emancipation.

The ANC Youth League's recent visit to Venezuela discovered amongst other
things that the people can immediately benefit from the State's democratic
ownership and control of key sectors of the economy, and oil in this case.
Venezuela's democratic control and ownership of oil refutes a neo-liberal
scarecrow that any form of State ownership will repulse foreign investors.
The United States, which has recurrently failed to remove the revolutionary
leadership of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, continues to be the
biggest consumer of Venezuelan oil, and most of its corporations and brands
continue to do business in Venezuela. 

Forward to nationalisation of mines forward!

REFERENCES AND ENDNOTES

Pollin, R. Epstein, G. Heintz, J. and Ndikumana, L. (2006) An
Employment-Targeted Economic Program for South Africa. New York: United
Nations Development Programme (UNDP). 

COSATU (2010) "Towards the Nationalisation of Mines and Monopoly Industry".
February 2010.  

ANC 52nd National Conference resolution of Economic Transformation, December
2007. 

Dialego (1975) Philosophy and class struggle. 

 

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