PoliticsWeb.gif

 

 

Development needs history and patience

 

Cardo needs a few lessons in history

 

 

Wesley Seale, Politicsweb, Johannesburg, 14 August 2014

 

Michael Cardo, in his article The ANC's developmental doublethink
<http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71619?oid=
681881&sn=Detail&pid=71616>  [Politicsweb, 13 August 2014], does his PhD in
History a grave disservice for two reasons.

 

Firstly, he seems to ignore the history of "development", the "development
discourse" and the emergence of the term "developmental state". Had he taken
the time to study the developmental discourse in the last, say, 50 years, he
would have soon discovered the metamorphosis, almost literally, of this
science and practice. Erik Thorbecke's research paper, The Evolution of the
Development Doctrine, 1950-2005
<http://www.wider.unu.edu/publications/working-papers/research-papers/2006/e
n_GB/rp2006-155/> , is a good starting point.

 

If anything we can deduce from Thorbecke's analysis then it is that i) the
concept and practice of 'development' has evolved; and, ii) that
'doublethink' continues, even to this day, in the scientific field of
developmental studies on what exactly 'development' means. For example, for
decades 'development' was measured, and continues to be measured, in
economic terms. There is an almost automatic equation of economic
development and development. Worse still, economic 'growth' means
development. Even worst, economic 'freedom', let's think of freedom in Sen's
terms, was to come from the nationalisation of mines, as grossly suggested
by some.

 

Importantly, one would want to suggest that national consensus be reached on
what exactly we, as South Africans, not as members of the ANC, the DA,
COSATU, NUMSA, but as South Africans, mean when we use the term
'development'; but more about national consensus in a bit. There is no one
size fits all definition of development.

 

Furthermore, one would have thought that an academic of Cardo's calibre
would interrogate the history of the developmental state. This is as
interesting as it is exciting in a number of respects. Studying and starting
the concept 'developmental state', Chalmers Johnson, in his study of the
Japanese Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) came to two
particular pointers, relevant to our discussion [i].

 

Johnson points out that the interventionist state specifically identified
special areas in which it found it necessary to intervene and play a role.
In the area of social services, it sought it necessary to improve health and
education, hence improving human capital. In the area of the economy, it
specifically identified sectors and/or industries that were succeeding and
invested more funding, directly or indirectly, from the fiscus, to ensure
that those sectors or industries grew (see our IPAP and New Growth Path in
this respect).

 

The National Development Plan: Vision 2020 envisages doing just that in its
15 chapters. It is built on the premise that the state must be
interventionist and that it cannot leave critical areas such as health,
education, the development of industries and even social cohesion and
transformation to the varies of the market. This is the contradiction and
farce of parties such as the Democratic Alliance. They agree with the plan,
with all its ingredients for a developmental state but completely rule out
its founding philosophy of a state that must intervene.

 

Cardo points out this contradiction in his article when he insists on the
establishment of "...a capable state whose role is developmental rather than
dirigiste...". If only he had ventured into the history of a developmental
state, as seen in the rise of the Asian Tigers for example, then he would
find that at the heart of the notion of a developmental state is precisely a
state that is dirigiste. But then again we might now even question the
'doublethink' on 'state'.

 

As a side point, this contradiction is a symptom of liberals still stuck in
the Thatcher/Reagan mould. Even the World Bank
<https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/5980> , as far back as in
1997, had to recognise the need for the state to intervene in order to play
a developmental role. History was simply repeating itself, this is what
Hitler had done in pre-World War II Germany and what the Marshall Plan was
all about. Free-market economics worked for Thatcher and Reagan, it crashed
the world economy in 2008 and yet liberals, of the Cardo ilk, wish for us to
go back to Egypt.

 

In addition, Chalmers Johnson also laid emphasis on the particular
characters that bureaucrats had. Peter Evans [ii] later develops this into
the notion of embedded autonomy. In deconstructing embedded autonomy, Evans
notes that firstly these bureaucrats, though highly skilled, enjoy the
institutional culture of gakubatsu. They have studied together, are formed
together and are deployed to various strategic positions within the state,
be it in government, parastatals and/or government agencies. Here they work
for decades before being deployed to head-up certain industries and sectors.
In the ANC, we call this cadre deployment.

 

However, Johnson and later Evans highlight the important role that social
capital plays in building a developmental state. In this respect, reaching
national consensus is of utmost importance, and ensuring that we move beyond
the cleavages of our society becomes imperative.

 

As a student of history, Cardo would hopefully appreciate the role that
CODESA I and II played in the shaping of our Constitution, a document that
hopefully, he will agree with me, unites and should unite all of us, despite
our differences. Reaching consensus through these talks, over time, required
all parties to move beyond their corners and bridge the gaps that
infiltrated us through our history and circumstances. We could reach a
democratic dispensation because of national consensus. We could ride off
this wave of national consensus, with social capital in hand, by
successfully hosting the Rugby and Soccer World Cups, among others.

 

National consensus but more importantly social capital, the child thereof,
is the hinge in which the NDP works or not. Hence the ANC has assured others
that it views the NDP as a working document, a document that is alive. It
needs, whether you agree or not, the buy-in from the largest trade union in
this country.

 

Consideration of all views is important even those parties not represented
in Parliament. The DA might be arrogant, as they are in the Western Cape,
and not give much attention and detail to consultation, participation and
engagement but the ANC does place these high on its agenda for it wants to
create national consensus. Together, in a non-partisan manner, we need to be
patient in order to create a better future for our children.   

 

Secondly, given this national consensus, Cardo, as a good historian, would
know that CODESA I and II was not the first time that South Africans crossed
their divisions and sat down to talk to each other and reached consensus.
Even though a major role player was absent, the government at the time, the
Congress of the People held in Kliptown in 1955 sought to reach national
consensus. It was not a gathering of the ANC alone, albeit a major role
player. Imagine what the outcome would have been had the other major role
player at the time, the National Party, joined the Congress of the People?

 

The Freedom Charter, the product of that national consensus project, is the
gakubatsu of the National Democratic Revolution. Yes the NDR, like any
theory on a developmental state, requires an interventionist state but it
also espouses a free, non-racist, non-sexist, democratic South Africa in
which everyone enjoys in the country's wealth. As a historian, Cardo might
be surprised that at the very heart of our Constitution lies the lines of
the Freedom Charter. To therefore suggest that the Freedom Charter, which
guides the NDR, contradicts the Constitution and the NDP is therefore
dangerously disingenuous.

 

Just as he does his PhD in History a disservice, Michael Cardo does Amartya
Sen's definition of 'development as freedom' a gross injustice. As a student
of development, one shudders to think that Sen could have suggested that the
state must not be developmental, and all that means with its history, and
that the state must therefore leave the circumstances, which create or
hinder opportunities for the development of capabilities, untouched. Even in
the capabilities approach, correctly as Cardo points out espoused by the
NDP, an interventionist and therefore NDR approach needs to take place.  

 

There is no better example of doublethink and doubletalk in South Africa
than the DA's opposition to transformation. We have seen it question this
term as it has flip-flopped on employment equity, broad-based Black economic
empowerment and land reform. The DA fundamentally opposes transformation and
therefore will not agree to the objectives of the NDR. It uses the NDP as a
launch-pad, nothing else, to attack the NDR because it dismisses the ideals
of a non-racist, non-sexist, free and democratic South Africa where all
share in the country's wealth. It wants to perpetuate past privilege. If
anything, like Cardo, it professes to acknowledge history but in the same
stroke dismiss it.

 

Yet what the NDP, based on the Constitution and the NDR, calls for is a
national consensus and just as the government has to be patient with some in
COSATU and the SACP, so too the ANC government will be patient with the DA.
For as with Cardo, and his spin, we have to be patient if we wish to build a
capable and developmental state.

 

 

-   Wesley Seale has a Masters in Governance and Development from the
University of Sussex, UK and is the Policy Development Officer for the ANC
in the Western Cape.

 

 

Footnotes:

 

[i] See Johnson, C. 1982. MITI and the Japanese Miracle: The Growth of
Industrial Policy, 1925-1975. Stanford: Stanford University Press

 

[ii] See Evans, P. 1989. "Predatory, Developmental, and Other Apparatuses: A
Comparative Political Economy Perspective on the Third World State".
Sociological Forum. Vol. 4 No. 4. Special Issue: Comparative National
Development: Theory and Facts for the 1990's. pp561-587

 

 

From:
http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71619?oid=6
83131
<http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71619?oid=
683131&sn=Detail&pid=71616> &sn=Detail&pid=71616

 

 

 

 

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