New South African Review 1. Anthony Butler
these countries embarked on extensive programmes to stimulate domestic sales, including subsidies for purchasers of consumer durables as well as huge investments in infrastructure.
These developments had significant implications for South Africa’s longer term prospects. Essentially, South Africa participated in the boom of the 2000s by exporting mining products to world markets since the relatively strong rand of the mid-2000s largely blocked manufactured exports (see Hausman et al 2007). As noted above, employment growth occurred rather in the services and construction, essentially to meet the needs of the small high-income group and state infrastructure and redistributive programmes. The new international conditions meant that exports of consumer and capital goods faced even higher obstacles than during the boom.
This situation called into question the basic thrust of South Africa’s industrialisation policy, embodied as of 2010 in the first and second Industrial Policy Action Plans (IPAP) published by the Department of Trade and Industry (dti 2007 and 2010). For most of the period from 1994, the dti’s industrial policy centred on supporting manufactured exports. The first IPAP contained virtually no projects to meet domestic or regional demand or to create employment while raising living standards. The auto industry enjoyed by far the largest subsidies of any industry, with tax relief used mostly to encourage exports. (Barbour 2005) The second IPAP paid greater attention to industries that would meet local demand, both for wage goods and for the infrastructure build programme, but it still maintained a strong emphasis on export-oriented and knowledge-based industries.
In the event, the industrialisation policy proved singularly ineffective. As the second IPAP pointed out, that reflected in part inadequate resourcing and inconsistent implementation. The share of total government spending going explicitly to support agriculture, mining, manufacturing and construction fell from 4 per cent in the mid-1990s to 3 per cent in the mid-2000s.5 In the 2000s, moreover, the economy’s growing dependence on short-term capital inflows led to appreciation of the rand. In these circumstances, exports from the mining value chain, including refined but not fabricated base metals, continued to dominate.
Table 19: Mining in the economy, 1998 to 2008
Source: Calculated from standardised industry data in Quantec EasyData. Downloaded from www.quantec.co.za in September 2009.
The structural issues laid bare by the global economic crisis pointed to the need for more innovative approaches to development. A viable growth strategy should focus more on meeting needs in the domestic and regional market, including basic consumer goods and infrastructure effectively funded through the state. In addition, it would have to ensure effective measures to enhance the overall efficiency and inclusiveness of the economy by continuing to improve core economic infrastructure; addressing the serious problems with general education systems serving most black communities; and reducing the cost of living for working people, especially for food, public transport and healthcare. Finally, as the second IPAP noted, it would need to include institutional changes to mobilise domestic resources to fund priority investments while reducing dependence on short-run inflows of financing through the stock and bond markets.
This relatively modest growth strategy might seem second-best to establishing a world-class modern industrial economy. Given the emerging constraints on global demand, however, it was more likely to succeed in laying the basis for sustained growth than a classical export-oriented industrial strategy. Moreover, it would do more to generate opportunities for the majority of southern Africans in the short to medium term, helping to overcome the employment backlogs that the international economic crisis aggravated.
NOTES
1 The media generally reported annualised quarterly falls in GDP, which look significantly larger than the actual drop.
2 The database for the Quarterly Labour Force Survey for the fourth quarter of 2009 was not available at the time of writing, so some elements of the analysis here only go up to the third quarter of 2009.
3 In the third quarter of 2009, the QLFS reported that 9 per cent of South Africans did not report their race, compared to none in the fourth quarter of 2008 and the second quarter of 2009. The increase appears to reflect almost exclusively a decision by whites and to a lesser extent Coloureds and Asians, mostly in relatively senior positions, not to declare their race. Thus, the share of Africans in the total population was reported at 79 per cent for all three quarters, while the share of Coloureds and Asians dropped from 12 per cent in the earlier two quarters to 9 per cent in the third quarter of 2009, and the share of whites dropped from 9 per cent in the earlier quarters to 3 per cent. In addition, the category that did not give race in the third quarter of 2009 had an employment profile similar to that of non-Africans: the employment ratio was 56 per cent, compared to 48 per cent for declared non-Africans; the share in formal employment was 93 per cent, compared to 79 per cent for all non-Africans and 92 per cent for whites; the share employed as senior managers and professionals was 40 per cent, compared to 27 per cent for whites, and 11 per cent for Coloureds and Asians. The employment by industry was not as good a match, however. The non-declared category had a larger share in community, business and financial services and a lower share in manufacturing than non-Africans who gave their race.
4 The survey was piloted in 2001, and can be relied on from September 2002.
5 Data on expenditure by sector from 1995 kindly provided by the national Treasury in 2008.
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