South African business leaders are growing increasingly concerned that the government doesn’t have the will or capacity to overcome the economic devastation wrought by the coronavirus pandemic.
Business for South Africa, an alliance of the nation’s main business groups also known as B4SA, expects the economy to contract as much as 10% this year and has spent the past four months drafting a plan to get it back on track. About 250 experts worked for free on the proposals that could potentially add R1-trillion to GDP, but they have gained limited traction with the authorities so far.
“My confidence in the government implementing this is very low,” Busi Mavuso, the CEO of Business Leadership South Africa, which forms part of B4SA, said in an online briefing. “I can’t say the government jumped for joy in receiving it.”
The R5.1-trillion economy, which was already in recession before the coronavirus struck, went into a tailspin after a lockdown was imposed to curb the spread of the disease in late March. Most businesses were closed for five weeks and a study by a group of 30 academics and researchers estimated that three million people lost their jobs between February and April, while 1.5 million others were furloughed.
The government could have done a better job in managing the lockdown and the ensuing fallout, Cas Coovadia, the CEO of Business Unity South Africa, another B4SA member, said at the same briefing. Still, he said the business groups had supported the need for a lockdown.
If all the work that business has done on how to orchestrate a revival “goes to waste because of inaction, history will judge us”, he said. “The ball very much does lie in the government’s court. Leadership has to come from government.”
‘Inaction and indecision’
The B4SA plan calls on the government to fulfil longstanding pledges to make it easier to do business, clamp down on graft and overhaul badly managed state companies. The group opposes tinkering with the central bank’s mandate or threats to its independence and dictating to pension funds on how to invest.
“It is not as though we didn’t know what decisions need to be taken and what then needs to be implemented,” said Martin Kingston, who heads B4SA’s steering committee and is deputy president of Busa. “Where there is scepticism or concern among the leadership of business is that leopards don’t change their spots. The hallmark of inaction and indecision is going to carry on.”
Kganki Matabane, the CEO of the Black Business Council, voiced similar concerns.
“We are always announcing plans,” he said. “There is no action that follows the words. We need to find a way to put more pressure on government to start implementing and stop talking.” — (c) 2020 Bloomberg LP