{"id":6185,"date":"2025-06-07T09:45:00","date_gmt":"2025-06-07T09:45:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.burn-the-priest.com\/?p=6185"},"modified":"2025-06-10T11:30:21","modified_gmt":"2025-06-10T11:30:21","slug":"south-africa-must-revive-its-industrial-ambitions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.burn-the-priest.com\/index.php\/2025\/06\/07\/south-africa-must-revive-its-industrial-ambitions\/","title":{"rendered":"South Africa must revive its industrial ambitions"},"content":{"rendered":"
South Africa’s industrial decline is accelerating. State-owned enterprises that once drove economic transformation now epitomise institutional failure. Eskom’s power cuts cripple manufacturing. Transnet’s rail network deteriorates while ports struggle with backlogs. The Industrial Development Corporation, established to finance industrialisation, limps along with a compromised balance sheet.<\/p>\n
This infrastructure was built on the vision of Jan Smuts, prime minister from 1919 to 1924 and 1939 to 1948. While his commitment to racial segregation was morally reprehensible, his approach to economic development offers lessons for today’s policymakers grappling with sluggish growth and persistent inequality.<\/p>\n
Smuts understood that South Africa needed to transcend its role as a commodity supplier to Britain’s industrial economy. His developmental state model, combining strategic state investment, international partnerships and technocratic competence, transformed the country from a mining enclave into Africa’s most sophisticated industrial economy.<\/p>\n
The foundations he laid endured for decades. The Electricity Supply Commission (later Eskom) provided cheap power that enabled large-scale manufacturing. The Iron and Steel Corporation (Iscor) supplied essential inputs for further industrialisation. His successors built on these foundations, establishing Sasol for synthetic fuels and the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research.<\/p>\n
Today, these institutions are shadows of their former selves. More troubling, the country appears to have lost the capacity for the long-term thinking that created them.<\/p>\n
South Africa’s economic performance tells a sobering story. Growth has averaged just 0.8% annually over the past five years, well below the rate needed to reduce unemployment or meaningfully tackle poverty. The Gini coefficient, measuring income inequality<\/a>, has remained stubbornly at 0.66 since the 1990s, making South Africa one of the world’s most unequal societies.<\/p>\n The benefits of black economic empowerment (BEE) policies have accrued primarily to political and economic elites, while the rest remain excluded from meaningful economic participation. The debate over the benefits of BEE has resurfaced, particularly concerning its mechanisms for wealth distribution. This has been highlighted by the recent scepticism surrounding the potential introduction of Starlink to South Africa, with concerns about exceptions to BEE compliance.<\/p>\n