SACPblackStar.jpg

 

South African Communist Party, Cape Town, 29 October 2014

 

 

Introductory statement at the public launch of the SACP discussion document:

 

Going to the Root - A Radical Second Phase of the NDR

 

its context, content and our strategic tasks

 

 

Two decades beyond South Africa's globally acclaimed democratic transition
we are living in a deeply paradoxical reality. We have a progressive
constitution that has abolished decades of white minority rule. From a
society once immersed in a protracted, low-level civil war, we've emerged
into a country in which open, multi-party democratic elections have become
the norm.

 

But despite these and many other achievements, our country continues to be
afflicted with crisis-levels of unemployment, poverty and inequality, and
this triple crisis threatens to undermine the democratic constitutional
advances we've made. Why the paradox? We are frequently told that the
problem is anaemic growth - but from the mid-1990s through until five or six
years ago there was relatively strong GDP-measured growth. But unemployment
(in the narrow definition), and its resulting impact on poverty and
inequality, remained at crisis levels, well over 20%. Clearly our
socio-economic challenges are rooted in deep-seated systemic features of our
society. They are not just of a cyclical nature.

 

At the ANC's December 2012 Mangaung National Conference the imperative of a
"second radical phase of the national democratic revolution" was endorsed.
It is a perspective that the SACP strongly supports. But what is meant by a
"second radical phase"? Why a "second" phase? Is the word "radical" just a
cosmetic flourish? Does the idea of a "national democratic revolution" have
any contemporary relevance?

 

Today we are releasing for public engagement an SACP discussion document,
"Going to the Root.  A Radical Second Phase of the NDR - its context,
content and our strategic tasks" in which we seek to provide answers to
these and other questions. We hope to open up a debate across our ANC-led
alliance and among a much broader national public.

 

The discussion document acknowledges that, over the past 20 years, we have
embarked on what might be described as a "first phase" of democratisation.
This first phase has been radical in its own way. Politically and
constitutionally it abolished a state form associated with white minority
rule. Over the past two decades a major redistributive programme has also
been underway:

 

-   Social grants now reach more than 16 million South Africans (nearly
one-third of our population)  - up from 3 million in 1994;

 

-   Over 7 million new household electricity connections have been made
since 1996. (To put this achievement into context - in the preceding
century, successive white minority regimes only electrified 5 million
households!);

 

-   Over 3.3 million free houses have been built, benefiting more than 16
million people;

 

-   More than 1.4 million students have benefited from the National Student
Financial Aid Scheme;

 

-   Over 9 million learners in 20 000 schools receive daily meals.

 

-   Over 400 000 solar water heaters have been installed free on the
rooftops of poor households in the past 5 years - one of the largest such
programmes in the world.

 

And much more besides.

 

However, this first phase has had two major limitations:

 

1.    The progressive socio-economic advances have been largely
RE-DISTRIBUTIVE. This state-led redistribution has relied principally on
fiscal resources derived from a largely untransformed PRODUCTIVE economy.
But it is this productive economy, locked into a problematic
path-dependency, that is, precisely, at the root of what is reproducing the
triple crisis of unemployment, poverty and inequality.

 

2.    This massive re-distributive programme has also been conceived
essentially as a "top-down", "state-delivery" programme in which citizens
are turned into "beneficiaries", "clients", "customers" - and not
productive, responsible and active protagonists of transformation. The state
is seen (and sees itself) as a "wheel-barrow" responsible for off-loading
various "deliverables" into communities. This has had three further negative
consequences:

 

-   As government's massive redistributive effort is overwhelmed by the
scale of problems, or falls behind rising and often legitimate expectations,
or fails to "deliver" equally at the same time to everyone - so popular
anger turns on government. The top-down redistributive "delivery" model
based on always insufficient fiscal resources sets up government as a
sitting duck target for anger and frustration - while monopoly capital
disinvests and largely escapes blame.

 

-   The tendency to transform our popular mass base into individual or
household "beneficiaries", "recipients", "clients" of government delivery
also tends to undermine the potential cohesion of poor communities. Many
"township delivery protests" are fuelled by factional rivalries within
communities - backyard dwellers versus shack-dwellers for priority listing
on the housing list; or competing taxi associations for operating licences
on new routes; etc.

 

-   The effective de-mobilisation of popular forces by the top-down, state
"delivery" model of redistribution has also deprived us of an important
means of transforming the state itself. The Freedom Charter's call not just
for one-person one-vote representative democracy, but also for "DEMOCRATIC
ORGANS OF SELF-GOVERNMENT" - i.e. for various forms of ACTIVE PARTICIPATORY
DEMOCRACY has been largely lost. Since 1994 we have nominally introduced a
wide range of statutory institutions and practices implying participatory
democracy - community police forums, school governing bodies, ward
committees, municipal participatory budgeting, etc. However, in practice
most of these are non-functional, or are captured either by political
functionaries, or by middle-class interests and used to preserve existing
privileges. Yet, organs of popular participatory democracy are potentially
our best weapon for transforming the state, and overcoming inherently
negative features - bureaucratic silos, officiousness and indifference on
the part of state functionaries, technocratic aloofness, and, above all,
corruption.    

 

>From this diagnostic, two key and related perspectives are advanced in our
discussion paper:

 

1.    The problematic path-dependent nature of our PRODUCTIVE economy must
be radically transformed;

 

2.    We need an active citizenry and a transformed relationship between the
state and communities.

 

But what are the systemic problems within our productive economy?

 

South Africa's capitalist industrial revolution in the late 19th and early
20th century had several critical features whose legacy continues to lock
our economy into a problematic path-dependency:

 

-   It was an externally-driven (rather than an organically emerging
internal process) that established SOUTH AFRICA as a semi-peripheral mining
economy within the global capitalist system;

 

-   SOUTH AFRICA became (and still remains) a commodity exporting economy,
with high levels of monopoly concentration across all sectors including
mining and finance.

 

-   Inserted into the global economy as a semi-periphery, South Africa had
two key assets - its mineral deposits and "cheap" labour, the latter
reproduced through various forms of colonial and racial dispossession,
native reserves, dormitory townships and migrancy (whether annual or daily),
bantu education, etc.

 

Although colonial and/or white minority rule no longer exist formally, the
legacy rooted in this semi-peripheral, "cheap" labour dispensation is still
painfully etched into contemporary SOUTH AFRICA - in our urban and rural
spatial inequalities and skewed settlement patterns; in the relative
weakness of our manufacturing and small and medium-enterprise sectors; in
skills shortage and racialised inequities in schooling; in a huge reserve
army of labour; in the high levels of monopoly concentration; and much more.

 

Post-1994 a massive capital flight and an investment strike - the structural
problems get worse

 

Since 1994 many of these deep-rooted systemic problems have been aggravated.
In the latter decades of apartheid rule, a combination of tight exchange
controls, prescribed asset regulations and international sanctions meant,
paradoxically, that South African mining and finance monopolies were
compelled to re-invest their surplus into South Africa. This resulted in the
formation of large, multi-sectoral conglomerates and productive investment
from mining and finance into agro-processing, manufacturing, logistics and
retail. This helped to drive job creation and even increased skilling. It
was also the objective basis on which a powerful trade union movement
re-emerged in the late-1970s and through the 80s.

 

Post-1994 with the removal of sanctions and ill-considered liberalisation of
macro-economic and sectoral policies there has been a massive process of
capital exodus permitted by exchange control liberalisation, dual listings,
mergers and acquisitions, transfer pricing, tax avoidance, illegal capital
transfers, and a general process of financialisation (in which surplus is
increasingly invested in the global casino economy, rather than in
labour-absorbing, domestic productive activity).

 

In the discussion paper we provide a few examples, including Sasol, Afgri
and Absa. Absa, for instance, is one of four banking monopolies that
dominate South Africa's financial sector - but who owns it? With its origins
in the early mobilisation of Afrikaner capital, Absa itself was formed in
1991 out of a merger between United, Allied and Volkskas. In 1992 it
acquired the Bankorp group including Trustbank. In 2005 Barclays UK
purchased 56.4% of Absa. In 2013 Barclays increased its share-holding in
Absa to 62.3% and the name was changed to Barclays Africa Group Ltd. As at
June 2013 three-quarters of Absa/Barclay's Africa shareholders were located
outside of South Africa (with 57.6% in the UK alone).

 

This means that when the South African government engages with Absa (and
with most other former major private South African corporations), we are now
engaging them as foreign investors. Whatever her own personal patriotic
inclinations, when Barclay's Africa CEO Maria Ramos, for instance, calls for
a "social covenant" with government and labour - where does she derive her
mandate from?

 

In general this huge trans-nationalisation and financialisation of formerly
South African monopoly capital (including SASOL, Investec, Old Mutual, De
Beers, Anglo, Liberty, SAB Miller, Didata and Gencor, amongst others) has
seen a massive loss of savings, taxes and investment. According to one
academic study, in 2007 more than 20% of GDP was lost through capital
flight.

 

This process of trans-nationalisation and financialisation has resulted in
growing de-industrialisation and major job-losses, with an increasing loss
of national economic sovereignty. It is in this context that our discussion
paper argues that the "national" in the "national democratic revolution" has
a deep and, indeed, non-racial, contemporary relevance.

 

The content of a second radical phase of the NDR

 

It follows that a critical pillar of a second radical phase of the NDR must
be to regain a greater degree of national economic sovereignty. Amongst
other things this must mean breaking out of South Africa's semi-peripheral
positioning within the global imperialist system. In practice this will
require a "relative de-linking" from the dominant global economic powers -
including through sub-Saharan regional development, and the development of
alternative economic alliances, as in BRICS. Critical also is the challenge
of re-industrialisation so that economically we move up the global value
chain.

 

In practice, this means that we are not waiting for a second radical phase -
many of its key pillars are already cornerstones of government policy and
programmes - including the New Growth Path, the Industrial Policy Action
Plan, and the National Infrastructure Programme, amongst others. However,
there is still a long way to go. The effective driving of a second radical
phase requires a much higher level of state strategic discipline, a more
effective, long-range planning capacity and an active and mobilised popular
base. 

 

Our deep-rooted productive economy distortions mean that any expectation
that market-driven growth and ensuing labour market demand will resolve our
unemployment crisis is gravely misplaced. High levels of un- and
under-employment are likely to be a long-term reality, as the National
Development Plan recognises. In this situation the fostering of sustainable
(and productive) livelihoods, relatively de-linked from the vicissitudes of
the labour-market are absolutely essential.  

 

Our discussion paper proposes that we appreciate government's expanded
public works and other public employment programmes in this context - less
as hopeful conveyor belts into a private sector labour market, and more as
an expansion of our social security net, but with participants involved in
productive work by way of providing services and assets to poor communities.
Along with cooperatives, micro-enterprises and various forms of
self-employment, the public employment programmes can develop into a
solidarity economy relatively de-linked from the predations of the market.

 

The battle of ideas

 

In a concluding section, the discussion paper considers and briefly
critiques a number of alternative narratives about the challenges
confronting our society. While not necessarily rejecting issue-specific and
sectoral accords between government, labour and business  - the paper is
entirely sceptical about the notion of some all-in, long-term "social
accord", or "economic CODESA".

 

The paper acknowledges that some anti-ANC-alliance left radicalism has
produced valid critiques of South African monopoly capital. However, the
anti-ANC and, above all, the blanket anti-state positioning of these
tendencies means that any struggle for leverage over state power and
resources is relinquished. Oppositionism becomes an end in itself to the
detriment of advancing practical and effective programmes of transformation.
The paper also takes issue with DA leader, Helen Zille's agenda of seeking
to divide the ANC, between so-called "constitutionalists" who believe in the
"rule of law" and "radicals" who remain committed to a national democratic
revolution.

 

At the heart of our discussion paper is, precisely, the conviction that our
important constitutional and broader democratic gains can only be advanced,
defended and consolidated with a radical second phase of the National
Democratic Revolution that goes to the root of the systemic features of our
productive economy that are reproducing crisis levels of unemployment,
poverty and inequality.

 

 

SACP statement

Contact:
Alex Mohubetswane Mashilo - National Spokesperson, Head of Communications
Mobile: 082 9200 308
Office: 011 339 3621/2
Twitter: @2SACP
Website: www.sacp.org.za <http://www.sacp.org.za/> 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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