President Cyril Ramaphosa said consensus is emerging on a plan to revive an economy mired in the worst recession since 1992.
The proposals should be finalised within three weeks and the government will go into overdrive to execute them, Ramaphosa said in an online briefing to the South African National Editors Forum on Wednesday.
“We now need to move forward so we will be able to put the plan to the nation,” he said. “I want to see the implementation taking place and it will be directed from the president’s office.”
The coronavirus and a lockdown imposed in late March to curb its spread brought the economy to a near standstill, with GDP shrinking an annualised 51% in the three months to June from the previous quarter. The unemployment rate, which stood at 30% before the pandemic struck, is set to surge with a group of 30 academics and researchers estimating that three million people lost their jobs between February and April.
The government has unveiled a R500-billion package to support those worst affected by the shutdown. Ramaphosa is also spearheading a drive to garner more than $100-billion in private investment in infrastructure over the next decade.
No urgency
Even so, business leaders have complained that the government has failed to display the requisite urgency when it comes to reviving growth and reducing red tape, with a plethora of meetings and succession of plans failing to culminate in concrete action.
Talks between business, labour and government leaders to reach agreement on the recovery plan are going slowly, but are making progress, a person familiar with the negotiations said on Wednesday, asking not to be identified as the discussions aren’t public. Sticking points are reducing the number of focus areas and being more specific about timing, resources and commitments, they said.
Ramaphosa said the plan needs to be finalised as soon as possible and funding is still being discussed.
“Government has to a large extent run out of money and we are going to have to cobble money together,” he said. “The private sector will play a key role, government will lay a key role and we will all need to put shoulder to wheel to make sure this recovery plan works.”
The president also said his administration is steadfast in its commitment to tackling rampant corruption, and will give law-enforcement agencies additional resources to enable them to do their jobs.
“We are painstakingly putting things right,” he said. “We have now reached a stage where the changes we all want to see will start to unfold.” — Reported by Mike Cohen and Prinesha Naidoo, (c) 2020 Bloomberg LP