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Green energy could be key to SA economic recovery: expert

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Staff Reporter

South Africa should consider expanding the green energy sector as one of the ways of kickstart the economy after the COVID-19 pandemic because it has the potential to create more jobs, an economic has expert said.

Hugo Pienaar, from the Bureau for Economic Research at Stellenbosch University, told a webinar hosted by Central University of Technology on Thursday that it is important for the country to consider the sector as a viable option because it has potential for growth.

“There is a big focus on green energy but we haven’t seen the delivery of that,” Pienaar said in response to a question posed by The Free Stater on which sectors the country should put more emphasis on to kickstart a more viable recovery plan post the COVID-19 pandemic.

The webinar sought to provide a landscape of the economy for the next three years and give an insight into the use of the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) technologies after the pandemic.

Besides being clean and reliable, green energy is widely viewed as key to economic development because it has vast opportunities for job creation in manufacturing, installation and other downstream activities.

“There are plans but they keep being delayed. I think green energy helps us in a number of ways . . . we need to make that transition,” Pienaar said.

“There are a lot of private sector participants that are willing and able to provide the financing for such investments.

“The government doesn’t have any money to be putting on the table now.”

Pienaar said because of the pandemic, South Africa is likely to face high unemployment amongst those without skills and there is a need to look at sectors that can absorb such workers.

He said sectors like agriculture, manufacturing and mining could absorb a significant number of the unemployed.

“We need to focus on the future, but we also need to go back to basics and make it easier . . . by taking away some of the burdens on business, whether you are in manufacturing or agriculture,” Pienaar said.

“It’s important to take away some of the uncertainties to stimulate those sectors,” he added, emphasising the country could be faced with a very difficult time given that the official unemployment rate stood at 29.1 percent in the first quarter of this year.

“Those numbers are clearly going to increase. I really do worry about those people and where they will find employment.”

Pienaar said while other options like the Public Works Programme could be considered for temporary employment, it pays a very low income and is only ideal for survival.

He suggested the government should therefore focus more on creating a better environment for private businesses to thrive.

“So, the role of government should be to try and make it as easy as possible for the private sector to grow by taking away the red tape . . . especially for small businesses, to hire people,” Pienaar said.

The other speaker, Mitesh Chotu, an area solution architect at Microsoft, spoke on the potential of 4IR and said it was important to look at sectors with potential and “disrupt or you will be disrupted”.

“You need to look at sectors that have the ability to stimulate a significant amount of job creation . . . and this could be the construction sector, for example,” Chotu said.

“Infrastructure-led recovery seems to be across the board in the Middle-East where they are starting to reinvent themselves by kicking off massive projects.”

Business

Business chief bemoans slow transformation

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Staff Reporter

Business Unity South Africa (BUSA) president Professor Bonang Mohale has blamed the high poverty levels among black South Africans on slow transformation and urged the government to use its powers to improve people’s lives.

“When you have political power, you were not given this political power to look at it and admire it every morning and caress it,” said Mohale, who is also the chancellor of the University of the Free State.

He said this during a Business Breakfast Masterclass organised by the Department of Economic, Small Business Development, Tourism and Environmental Affairs (DESTEA) and the Free State Black Business Chamber (BMF) in Bloemfontein on Monday.

“Do something with it (power) and that something is . . . you have to love your people to lead them,” said Mohale.

“That something means – because we were not left alone for 370 years of colonialism, 98 years of separate development and 48 years of apartheid – can I use this power to change this so that our children do not disown us . . . saying poverty still has primarily a black and feminine face,” he added.

The BUSA president anchored his keynote delivery on his latest book, Behold the Turtle.

“The Basotho say ‘behold the turtle’ . . .  it only makes progress when its neck is stuck out. We all begin to die when we are silent about things that genuinely matter to us,” he said.

“When the turtle is concerned about ‘me, myself and I’, it sits in its own shell. It’s protected. It cannot be touched. It is safe, it is secure. But it will sit there, it will die there.”

The event, which drew a cross-section of people from the local business sector, was held under the theme ‘Growing the Economy of the Free State Province in 2022 – A Collaborative Approach’.

Mohale continued: “For it to move from point A to point B, it has to risk it all and take its head out of the shell.

“But when it does so, the birds of prey can swoop on it, hit it on the head and it might die.

“So, every single time it wants to make progress, it’s a dance with death.

“Therefore, in South Africa today, when so many of us dare to hope that joy and peace will prevail, we will only make progress when we are prepared to risk it all, especially now.

“In another three months, we will be 28 years into our democracy and yet poverty still has primarily a black feminine face, and yet we are in office.

“We refuse to be in power because power means you can do something about it. You can change the circumstances.”

A firm talker, Mohale warned civil servants and ordinary citizens not to look aside when there is injustice for fear of losing their jobs as it doesn’t help society.

“Therefore, when you say, but I am a public servant, if I use my voice judiciously and speak truth to power, I might lose my job, better I be quiet . . . know that you are killing not only yourself, but the entire generation that comes behind you,” he said.

“So, when you are a common citizen and state capture happens on your watch, you are silent and do not say anything, know that, that is genocide.”

He said nationally, 51 percent of the population is female and yet women representation in positions of leadership is not more than 24 percent.

The number of senior black executives, according to the BUSA boss, has just increased from 14.3 percent to 14.7 percent, but warned it could take the country another 150 years to reach the ultimate intention of Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment.

“And what is that ultimate intent? It’s to ensure that this economy is broadly reflective of us,” he said.

“It must look like us . . . just like China, India and Japan. Those businesses look typically Chinese, Indian and Japanese. 

“The culture . . . the language, the dress code is Chinese, Indian and Japanese, except in South Africa.”

“In fact, when you get into our boardrooms in South Africa, you’ll be forgiven to think that we are an outpost of Europe,” he pointed out, adding white males still occupy about 70 percent of the top executive positions in the corporate sector.

“Today all you have to do is to be born black and chances are you are condemned to live in the informal settlements of Alexandra.

“You just have to be born white and the chances are you are destined for the leafy suburbs of Bryanston without doing much because the economic power patterns have been set for generations to come.

“Now, the reason we have this power is so that we do something to intervene and that intervention is called transformative instruments.

“All of us, myself included, we have not succeeded in eradicating the legacy of apartheid. It’s still living with us.

“All of us have not done (enough) to make sure the black majority live better lives. Those poor living conditions were by design . . .

“Today, 28 years into democracy, out of every R100 that we spend on education, R67 is spent on a white kid, R20 on a coloured kid, R10 on a coloured kid and the balance on an African kid. You don’t need to read it. You see it . . . and we are in power. We command the budget,” he explained.

PUSHING ECONOMIC TURNAROUND . . . DESTEA MEC Makalo Mohale flanked by FEZI Auditors and Consultants chief executive officer Nthabeleng Khawe and Will Choene

In response, DESTEA MEC Makalo Mohale said one of the weaknesses of the Free State economy is that there is very little value addition to what is produced in the province.

He said the province has mainly relied on the primary sectors where commodities are extracted and are value-added outside, coming back as finished goods to be sold.

The MEC said the province has also tried to invest in education because it understands it’s one effective way to improve people’s lives as well as the economy.

“Our approach is to make sure that we work with business to drive this vision that we have to grow the economy of the Free State,” he said.

“What we want is to ensure there is industrialisation in the province.

“Our key programme towards value addition is ‘let’s make the Free State a big factory . . .’ where all the commodities that we consume, we are able to produce.”

He also took the opportunity to explain the Free State Integrated Local Economic Development and Transformation Bill which has been put out for public comment saying it seeks to respond and integrate various interventions.

“The Bill seeks to ensure that all the things you said must happen become reality. We are using our legislative power to ensure that happens,” the MEC said.

“There are four key areas in the Bill: it recognises the sector as a key partner and creates important structures to ensure business is not left behind in the new development model.

“We envisage a situation where there is a formal business voice not the current set-up that is voluntary.”

He said the Bill also seeks, among others, to promote manufacturing in the province.

It also gives power to the MEC for economic development to designate certain commodities for enterprise development.

This means the government will only buy certain products from local producers.

It also addresses the issue of business licensing.

The MEC said some of the requirements are that only those that are lawfully in the country will be allowed to operate businesses in the province.

Other panellists included BMF chairperson Mosebetsi Dhladhla, Standard Bank behavioural economist Emile du Plessis and FEZI Auditors and Consultants chief executive officer Nthabeleng Khawe.

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Economy

Treasury promises spending restraint despite mining windfall

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National Treasury on Thursday pledged to cut the deficit and curb debt in its mid-term budget, saying it would not commit to new long-term spending despite a windfall from high commodities prices.

Africa’s most industrialised nation was hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic last year, but its economy bounced back unexpectedly strongly in 2021 as global demand for its exports, such as metals, surged.

The Treasury now sees the deficit at 7.8 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) this fiscal year, versus the 9.3 percent  forecast in the main February budget, and gross debt peaking at 78.1 percent of GDP in 2025/26 versus the 88.9 percent seen in February.

The improved projections were influenced by a GDP rebasing by the statistics agency in August.

The Treasury said it would stick to a disciplined fiscal strategy and set a new target of narrowing the deficit to 4.9 percent of GDP in 2024/25.

The Treasury now sees GDP expanding 5.1 percent this year, compared to the 3.3 percent predicted in February.

“The economy has recovered more quickly than anticipated. Nevertheless, the recent spike in commodity prices, which has supported GDP growth and tax revenues, is considered temporary,” it said in its budget review.

“Government will not commit to new long-term spending in response to temporary revenue windfalls.”

The new pledges come a week after the governing ANC recorded its worst election result since taking power at the end of apartheid, securing less than 50 percent of the vote for the first time amid frustration over poor services and repeated corruption scandals.

The coronavirus crisis has prompted heated debate about whether the country’s already generous social protection programmes should be expanded.

But the Treasury said additional funding for social grants was dependent on revenue outcomes and a decision would be made by the cabinet in time for the February 2022 budget, sticking to the cautious approach for which it has become known.

“In the absence of faster, job-creating growth, it is essential to maintain social protection in a sustainable way,” it said.

The Treasury said it would provide R2.9 billion to state defence company Denel to help it repay part of its debt and that it had provisionally set aside R11 billion for state insurer Sasria in the wake of civil unrest in July.

Duncan Pieterse, a senior Treasury official overseeing asset and liability management, said Denel’s guarantee conditions meant the state had to step in.

Beyond the amounts to Denel and Sasria, the Treasury said there would be no new money for state companies over the medium term.

“We’ve got to practise tough love,” Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana told reporters, referring to efforts to put an end to repeated bailouts to state firms.

Godongwana, who was appointed in a cabinet reshuffle in August, said he was “broadly . . . on the same page” from a fiscal standpoint as his predecessor, Tito Mboweni. – Reuters

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Business

Free State launches new industrial support incentives

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Staff Reporter

The Free State Department of Small Business Development, Tourism and Environmental Affairs (DESTEA) has launched various industrial support incentives aimed at assisting local businesses to kick-start their operations with limited hurdles.

DESTEA MEC Makalo Mohale said when he launched the packages last Friday that the support is aimed at stimulating local domestic manufacturing and production in order to retain and create more jobs in the province.

“The focus for this initiative will be towards Maluti-a-Phofung Special Economic Zone in Phuthaditjhaba as well as Thaba Nchu and Botshabelo industrial areas,” he said during a virtual launch of the support plan.

He said the incentives will ensure that these industrial parks become attractive to potential investors, improve the occupancy rate and thus create much-needed jobs.

“Furthermore, this will ensure that informal and emerging manufacturers have access to proper industrial infrastructure which will allow them to grow their businesses,” said the MEC.

The incentives include rental and set-up cost subsidies and are divided into three categories for established, emerging and informal manufacturers.

  • Established Manufacturers’ Incentive: to provide established enterprises involved in manufacturing and industrialisation with factory space rental subsidies – up to R2 million per applicant.
  • Emerging Manufacturers’ Incentive: to provide enterprises at the incubation or start-up stage, who are in manufacturing and industrialisation, with factory rental subsidy – up to R1 million per applicant.
  • Informal Manufacturers’ Incentive: to provide informal/unregistered manufacturers with factory space rental subsidies, and set-up costs grants to support manufacturing and industrialisation operations – R300 000 maximum per applicant.

“This is a decisive action to enhance the work already done in these areas, this time focusing at propelling SMMEs (small, micro and medium enterprises) in those areas to production levels,” said Mohale.

“Our emphasis is to ensure that our people access opportunities that will ensure that the means of production are in their hands,” he added.

According to Mohale, about 18 000 permanent job opportunities have been created in those areas.

“Our responsibility is to create conducive opportunities to increase these levels of employment opportunities and we believe that the Industrialisation Support Incentives Programme is our answer,” he pointed out.

The province has a budget of about R10.1 million per year for the support scheme over the next three years. 

Applications opened on Monday and will be close on June 15.

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