Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The price of freedom A special report on South Africa June 5th 2010 The Economist June 5th 2010 A special report on South Africa 1 The price of freedom Also in this section Your friendly monolith The ANC remains all-powerful. Page 2 Colour me South African Learning to live in a rainbow society. Page 4 Jobless growth The economy is doing nicelybut at least one person in three is out of work. Page 5 A new kind of inequality Black economic empowerment has had unintended consequences. Page 7 Hold your nose The smell of corruption. Page 8 A black middle class is emerging, but poverty and crime blight millions of lives. Page 9 Since embracing full democracy 16 years ago, South Africa has made huge strides. But, says Diana Geddes, not everything has changed for the better Last in class S The great scourges Education needs to take a giant leap. Page 11 Don’t get ill Or if you do, go private. Page 12 Still everything to play for The case for optimismand the many caveats. Page 13 Exchange rates May 25th 2010 10 rand = $ £ ¤ 1.25 0.88 1.03 Acknowledgments In addition to those mentioned in the text, the author would like to give special thanks to: Antony Altbeker, Kader Asmal, Ed Cameron, Frans Cronje, Adrian Gore, Paul Graham, William Gumede, Adam Habib, Alan Hirsch, Adele Kirsten, Russel Loubser, Leon Louw, Justice Malala, Temba Masilela, Sue Möller, Johannes Ndebele, Temba Nolutshungu, Cheryl de la Rey, Michael Spicer, Dave Steward, Gaba Tabane, Athol Trollip, Linky Tsotetsi and David Welsh. A list of sources is at Economist.com/specialreports An audio interview with the author is at Economist.com/audiovideo/specialreports PORT matters in South Africa. In his new year’s address to the nation, President Jacob Zuma described 2010 as the most important year in our country since 1994. To outsiders, playing host to this year’s football World Cup seemed perhaps a less momentous event than holding the country’s rst fully democratic elections that established a black-majority government 16 years agoespecially when the national team, Bafana Bafana, may be knocked out in the rst round. But with the kick-o on June 11th, just days after the country’s 100th birthday on May 31st, the world’s eyes will be on Africa’s leading economy for the next few weeks. Can the miracle nation, which won plaudits around the world for its peaceful transition to democracy after centuries of white-supremacist rule, conquer the bitter divisions of its past to turn itself into the rainbow nation of Nelson Mandela’s dreams? Or will it become ever more mired in bad governance, racial tension, poverty, corruption, violence and decay to turn into yet another African failed state? With Zimbabwe, its neighbour to the north, an ever-present reminder of what can happen after just a couple of decades of post-liberation single-party rule, many South Africans, black and white, worry that their country may be reaching a tipping point. Western fans arriving in South Africa for the World Cup could be forgiven for thinking that they were still in the rich world. Much of the infrastructure is as good as you will nd anywhereparticularly those parts that have been given multi-million-dollar facelifts in preparation for the tournament. Ten spectacular stadiums have been newly built or upgraded at a cost of 15 billion rand (see box, left, for currency conversions). Visitors arriving at O.R. Tambo, the main international airport, will be whisked into Johannesburg by the Gautrain, Africa’s rst high-speed rail link (pictured above). And many of the country’s hotels and restaurants are worldclass, including Bushmans Kloof hotel, three hours’ drive from Cape Town, recently voted the world’s best by Travel + Leisure website, and Cape Town’s La Colombe, ranked 12th in this year’s S.Pellegrino list of the best restaurants. Not as rich as it looks But in reality South Africa is no more than a middle-income developing country with a GDP per person of around $10,000 (at purchasing-power parity), a quarter of the American gure. On a per-head basis, it is the seventh-richest country in Africa by some measures. The average hides huge disparities. Under apartheid, whites were encouraged to believe they were part of the Western world. It was only when they had to start sharing their streets, goods and services with their darker-skinned compatriots that they began to wonder whether 1 2 A special report on South Africa The Economist June 5th 2010 2 they really were. Many now complain about falling standards. Yet most whites have done rather well since apartheid endedbetter, in fact, than most blacks. They still enjoy a good life, helped by cheap domestic help and rst-class private medical care and schools. For the majority of South Africa’s blacks, however, the living is not so easy. Although many of the poorest now get some kind of government support, it is only a pittance. Most blacks still live in shoddy shacks or bungalows without proper sanitation in poor crime-ridden townships outside the main cities. Their schools and hospitals are often in a dire state. And, in a country where there is little public transport, most blacks do not own a car. Although it has the world’s 24th-biggest economy, South Africa ranks a dismal 129th out of 182 on the UN’s Human Development Index (and 12th in Africa). The country’s constitution, adopted in 1996, is one of the most progressive in the world. It enshrines a wide range of social and economic rights as well as the more usual civil and political freedoms. Discrimination is banned not only on the grounds of race, gender, age and belief, but also of pregnancy, marital status, sexual orientation and culture. Every one of the country’s 49m people79% black, 9% white, 9% coloured (mixed race) and 3% Asian/Indianis guaranteed equal protection under the law. Freedom House, a Washingtonbased research foundation, gives South Africa a respectable rating of 2 in its freedom the rst country to perform a heart transplant, and some of its doctors are still among the best anywhere; yet its people’s health record is among the world’s worst. And, leaving aside war zones, it is one of the most violent and crime-ridden countries on the planet. This special report will look at South Africa the way that most of its people see it. The results are often harsh. in the world index, where 1 is completely free and 7 totally unfree. South Africa is a land of contrasts. It has fabulous mineral wealth, with 90% of the world’s known platinum reserves, 80% of its manganese, 70% of its chrome and 40% of its gold, as well as rich coal deposits; yet 43% of its population live on less than $2 a day. It has just announced plans to develop a satellite programme (with India and Brazil) and is the leading candidate to host the world’s biggest science project, the Square Kilometre Array radio telescope; yet in international maths, science and reading tests it performs abysmally. It has sky-high unemployment yet at the same time suffers from crippling skills shortages. It was The bright side Yet there are some encouraging signs that the contrasts are getting less stark. South Africa has recently cut its murder rate in half; virtually eradicated severe malnutrition among the under-ves; increased the enrolment in schools of children aged seven to 15 to nearly 100%; provided welfare benets for 15m people; and set up the world’s biggest antiretroviral treatment programme for HIV/AIDs. What about race? South Africa remains obsessed by it. That is hardly surprising after 350 years of racial polarisation, including nearly half a century of apartheid, when inter-racial sex was a criminal offence and non-whites were even banned from using the pavements. The subject waxes and wanes. Only last August Mr Zuma was warning his compatriots against reviving the race debate. But the murder in April of Eugene Terre’Blanche, leader of a white-supremacist group, and the racist outbursts by Julius Malema, the leader of the powerful Youth League of the ruling African National Congress (ANC), have brought it to the fore again. 7 Your friendly monolith The ANC remains all-powerful P OLITICAL division based on colour is entirely articial, and when it disappears, so will the domination of one colour group by another, said Nelson Mandela at his trial in 1964. The ANC has spent half a century ghting against racialism. When it triumphs, as it certainly must, it will not change that policy. By and large the ANC has remained true to that promise (apart from a slight Africanist wobble under Thabo Mbeki, Mr Mandela’s successor as president). Yet many whites no longer feel entirely at home in a country ruled for the past 16 years by a single all-powerful black-majority party that looks likely to remain in of- ce for the foreseeable futureuntil Jesus comes, as Mr Zuma puts it, not altogether reassuringly. The ANC claims to be a non-racial party. In government it has been scrupulous about maintaining the correct racial balance. Of the present 35 cabinet ministers, four are white; of the 99 provincial premiers and ministers, nine are white. But it was not until 1969 that whites were permitted to join the party, and only in 1985 that they were allowed onto its national executive committee. Whites can hardly complain, however, if the ANC’s support continues to be overwhelmingly black. Although many claim to have been anti-apartheid activists, only 3% chose to vote for the ANC in 1994, whereas 60% voted for the ruling National Party, the architects of apartheid. Today just 4% of whites say they support the ANC, compared with 92% of blacks. Most opt for the Democratic Alliance, led by Helen Zille, the white premier of the Western Capethe only one of nine provinces not ruled by the ANC. Thanks to massive support by coloureds in the Western Cape, the DA scooped up a record 16.7% nationwide in last year’s election. But analysts doubt that it will be able to go much beyond that unless it alters its racial complexion. Few blacks will vote for a party they still asso- 1 The Economist June 5th 2010 A special report on South Africa 3 2 ciate with their former oppressors. With a Zulu now in the presidency, the Zulu-dominated Inkatha Freedom Party, led by the ageing Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, seems to be fading away. Its share of the vote fell from over 10% in 1994 to less than 5% last year. After Mr Mbeki was squeezed out in 2008, a disgruntled group of his followers set up the Congress of the People (COPE) in a bid to break the ANC’s dominance. Although more racially balanced than other parties, it has been beset by leadership struggles and the lack of a clear identity. It won just 7% of the votes in last year’s election and now looks set to zzle out entirely, though it may try to join forces with the DA in next year’s local-government elections. Former liberation parties throughout the African continent have tended to overstay their welcome. Could the same thing happen in South Africa? The Institute for Democracy in South Africa reckons that prolonged dominant-party rule by the ANC is already eroding many of the checks and balances enshrined in South Africa’s constitution, including the separation of powers. Accountability is being weakened, public watchdogs are being undermined and party and state are becoming increasingly conated, it says. Yet of all African liberation parties, the ANC has made the most progress towards a stable constitutional democracy. It also has the advantage of not being dominated by a single megalomaniac gure. The agony after the ecstasy Everyone loved Mr Mandela, whites as well as blacks, for his calm dignity and generous spirit of reconciliation. But he was more of an idealised gurehead than a leader and chose to go after just one veyear term. Over the past 16 years South Africa has had four presidents (including Kgalema Motlanthe, who served for a brief interim period) and four elections. All have been judged free and faira rarity in Africa. Even when the ANC came within a whisker of winning the two-thirds majority required to change the constitution last year, no one tried to ddle the results. And although some democratic institutions may have been weakened, usually through appointing incompetent people, others, such as the press, the judiciary, the trade unions and the NGOs, are proving remarkably robust and independent. The country is also blessed with a strong and dynamic private-business sector. Mr Zuma has been in power for a year, and inevitably voices of discontent and 1 The one and almost only Election results, % of vote African National Congress National Party Democratic Alliance Congress of the People Inkatha Freedom Party 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1994 1999 2004 2009 Source: IEC disillusionment have begun to be heard. But on the whole he seems to have done much better than some apocalyptic predictions before his election suggested. Despite pressure from allies on the left, he has largely stuck to his predecessors’ marketfriendly economic policies. His appointments, with one or two glaring exceptions, have been good, some excellent. He is trying to deal with rampant corruption at all levels of government and putting more emphasis on accountability throughout the public sector. He has set up an independent National Planning Committee to advise on complex long-term issues such as water management, energy and the environment. He is drawing up plans to reform the failing education and health systems. And he is showing much more interest in the plight of the poor. By the end of last year he seemed to be on a Time for Zuma to show his hand roll, with 77% of South Africans saying he was doing a good job. But at the beginning of this year he had a bad few months. First came the revelation that he had fathered a love-child (his 20th o spring), born barely three months before his marriage to his third concurrent wife (and fth overall), with another two ancées waiting in the wings. In February he made an abysmally platitudinous stateof-the-nation speech, full of the old promises without a hint of how he was going to full them. There followed condemnation of his failure to disclose his business interests and to achieve a breakthrough in the political stalemate in Zimbabwe, and ever louder squabbling within the ANC’s ruling alliance with the trade unions and the Communists. By April his approval rating had slumped to 43%. Mr Zuma appeared to have lost his grip. Over the past couple of months he has sought to reassert his authority. He has even attempted, for the rst time, to rein in the incendiary Mr Malema, though with only partial success. His is not an easy task. Unlike many liberation movements, the ANC is a very broad church, ranging from out-and-out free-marketeers to dyed-inthe-wool Marxists. In the apartheid days all were united in their struggle for freedom. But once in government, the party had to start making hard choices, triggering erce factional ghting over both policy and power. Mr Zuma, catapulted into the presidency without a clear mandate or a strong power base of his own, has tended to fudge and procrastinate to keep everyone happy. He must now start showing some leadership. 7 4 A special report on South Africa The Economist June 5th 2010 Colour me South African Learning to live in a rainbow society G ENERATIONS of Afrikaners (whites mostly of Dutch, French and German descent, but often with a good dose of indigenous Khoikhoi blood, too) were brought up to believe that God had created blacks inferior to whites. Blacks were the descendants of Noah’s son, Ham, they were taught, cursed for ever more to be the servant[s] of servants. The material deprivations su ered by blacks under apartheid were bad enough. But the psychological damage is much deeper and more dicult to eradicate. Robbed of their dignity and sense of self-worth, manyeven some of those who have made it to the very topremain hypersensitive and acutely wary of the white man. In September 2007, when still president, Mr Mbeki spoke bitterly of the challenge to defeat the centuries-old attempt to dwarf the signicance of our manhood, to treat us as children, to dene us as subhumans whom nature has condemned to be inferior to white people, an animal-like species characterised by limited intellectual capacity, bestiality, lasciviousness and moral depravity, obliged in our own interest to accept that the white segment of humanity should, in perpetuity, serve as our lord and master. Mr Zuma has a much more relaxed approach to race, constantly stressing his commitment to the principle of non-racialism enshrined in the 1955 Freedom Charter. We, the people of South Africa, declare, the charter begins, echoing America’s Declaration of Independence, that South Africa belongs to all who live in it, black and white. What exactly nonracialism means is not clear, though it seems to suggest that people will be treated on their individual merits, not the colour of their skin. Yet the racial categories laid down under apartheid are still widely used, the only di erence being that people now choose their own classication rather than having it foisted on them. Under the 1950 Population Registration Act, South Africans were divided into four groups: whites, Asians/Indians, coloureds and natives or blacksin that order. The system was always a farce, relying on supercial physical characteristics and social traitswhere the individual lived, what South Africa united their fellow black and white countrymen in a rapturous outpouring of national pride. But 15 years on, says Lesiba Te o of the Human Science Research Council, we are retreating back into the dark days. Many blacks are resorting to the very racism that had been used against them, he claims. White used to come in varying shades of black, says a white former colleague, Ivor Chipkin: Now it’s just white. The black friends he had at school in the 1980s no longer seem to want to know him: It’s as if they’re saying: ‘You’ve had your time, now it’s ours’. Malema stirs it job he had, who his friends were and so on. In borderline cases the pencil test was used to judge the kinkiness of the individual’s hair. If the pencil fell out, he was classied as white; if it stayed in, he was coloured and condemned to inferior schools, separate beaches and a whole lot of other indignities. Nowadays, what used to be known as black is often labelled African. This upsets many whites, who insist that they are Africans, too. To confuse matters further, black is now often used to refer to Indians and coloureds as well as blacks, because the term non-whites, as they used to be called, o ends many blacks. But this special report will stick to the old terms because they are clearer. Educated blacks are alarmed at the way that some of their fellows play the race card whenever anything displeases them. Mr Malema is a past master at this. For him, all whites, whatever their struggle credentials, are the children of cowards and oppressors. He castigates the Democratic Alliance’s Helen Zille, a former anti-apartheid activist, as a racist little girl and her party’s youth wing as garden boys. Her black deputy, he says, just smiles at the madam. Moves to oust the poorly performing black boss of Eskom, the stateowned power utility, were condemned as hideous attempts to undermine African leadership in the economy. In 1995 the victory of South Africa’s national team in the rugby World Cup in The Afrikaners’ lament And the whites? These blacks are way behind us, an elderly white woman said indignantly, pointing to a joyful ululating crowd of onlookers from the local black township who had come to celebrate Mr Terre’Blanche’s funeral in Ventersdorp in the North West. We are trying to be civil and calm, but we can only do so much. God is with us, not them. Afrikaners, explained another mourner, want to be free, not ruled by savages. Today, many would dismiss such crudely racist views as belonging to a tiny right-wing lunatic fringe. Even so, lots of whites, especially Afrikaners, are beginning to feel that they have su ered in silence for too long. Of South Africa’s 4.5m whites, about 3m are Afrikaners. Most supported the apartheid National Party, which ruled South Africa for nearly half a century, from 1948 to 1994. As in Nazi Germany, many whites claim they never really knew what was going on. They are fed up with being collectively demonised as nasty racists with a shameful history and resent being told that whites who whinge about crime are free to leave the country. After all, it is their country, too, where their ancestors have lived and toiled for hundreds of years. Unlike many of their Englishspeaking compatriots, they have no other. Many also feel they have never been given sucient credit for helping to ensure a peaceful transition to black-majority rule. In the whites-only 1992 referendum on whether the apartheid government should continue to pursue a negotiated settlement with the ANC, more than two- 1 The Economist June 5th 2010 2 thirds of whites voted yes. However, that was not so much out of magnanimity as because they thought that the then president, F.W. de Klerk, would seek a powersharing deal in which the white minority would have some kind of veto. He had also warned them that a no vote would mean continuing economic sanctions and worsening chaos, perhaps even civil war. Many now feel betrayed: the constitution o ers no special deal for political minorities. Convinced that they no longer have any inuence, a good number have lost all interest in politics. But they still enjoy a good moanabout crime, reverse discrimination, potholed streets, power cuts and so on. Afrikaners, in particular, feel disgruntled about having lost their status, ag, party, geographical place-names and most of their schools. Many fear they are losing their language, too. Afrikaans, once one of the country’s two ocial languages (along with English), is now just one among 11, all supposedly enjoying equal protection under the constitution. In practice, however, English, the mother tongue of only 8% of South Africans, has taken over as the lingua franca. Long before the ANC came to power, fearful whites had begun to leave the country in droves. Net white ight since 1996 is thought to be around 500,000, which includes many of the country’s best and brightestdoctors, teachers, business managers, accountants, engineersall with skills desperately needed at home. As the global recession bit, some began to return, but not nearly as many as those, black and white, who continue to say tot- A special report on South Africa 5 siens (farewell). Surveys suggest that as many as 14% of whites and 12% of blacks are still thinking of leaving. Flip Buys, the leader of Solidarity, a centre-right, predominantly Afrikaner, trade union, insists that few Afrikaners are outright racists any more, but many feel increasingly unhappy about the way things are going in their country. However unequal society was before 1994, things worked, he says. Now nothing does. Afrikaners knew they had to adapt, but now they feel the price is too high. Their guilt has given way to anger. In the tense days after Mr Terre’Blanche was hacked to death by two of his black farm workers, Mr Buys rushed out a statement claiming that racial tensions had reached boiling point. Mr Zuma was sufciently alarmed to go on television to appeal for calm. Some whites charged the ANC’s Mr Malema with contributing to Mr Terre’Blanche’s death by singing a black struggle song, enjoining listeners to kill the Boer (Afrikaner farmer), despite a court order banning it as hate speech. Since 1994 some 1,000 white farmers, along with more than 2,000 of their family members and other white rural dwellers, have been murdered. A fortnight later Mr Buys put out a more considered statement. Although racist attacks on Solidarity members had been growing by leaps and bounds, he said, members should not ght racism with racism. The vast majority of white farmers had good relations with their workers, he noted. Anyone who exploited or maltreated their black employees should be roundly condemned. Look at what is right and wrong, he urged, not at who belongs to what race. As it happens, race relations are surprisingly good, given that it is less than two decades since the end of one of the world’s most racist regimes. The loud-mouthed Malemas and Terre’Blanches are in a tiny minority. In their day-to-day lives most people of all hues seem to get along ne, treating each other with courtesy if not total trust. More than 60% of South Africans say they have condence in a happy future for all races. Around half put their identity as South Africans before their racial or ethnic group. Blacks against blacks South Africa has seen political protests against apartheid, but not the sort of race riots and pogroms America’s South suffered from. What racial violence there has been has come from black South Africans and been directed at fellow blacks from outside the country. Solidarity puts the number of illegal immigrants in South Africa at 8m-9m, including some 3m from Zimbabwe. That may be too high, but there are certainly a lot of them, all competing with South Africans for jobs, housing, health care and other public services. They are also accused of engaging in crime. In May 2008 a series of horric xenophobic attacks across South Africa left 62 dead and 670 injured, and there have been sporadic attacks since, though none so serious. A study by the University of Cape Town last year found xenophobia to be probably rife in the country’s workplaces. 7 Jobless growth The economy is doing nicelybut at least one person in three is out of work W HEN the ANC took over in 1994, it inherited an economy that was virtually bankrupt, following decades of mismanagement, international sanctions and violent protests. Since then exports have doubled in real terms to reach $91 billion in 2008, accounting for 33% of GDP; output per person has risen by more than a quarter, having fallen throughout the previous two decades; public debt has halved, to 23% of GDP in 2008; ination, in double digits throughout the 1980s, has shrunk to 5.1%, well within the government’s target range of 3-6%; and interest rates charged on bank loans are at their lowest level in nearly three decades. The economy as a whole, which had been growing by less than 1% a year in the decade up to 1994, expanded by nearly 5% a year in the ve years to 2008 (see chart 2, next page). Not a bad record, but modest compared with growth rates in other emerging markets, which started from a much lower base. Last year South Africa’s economy slipped into recession for the rst time in 17 years, shrinking by 1.8%. Thanks to successive ANC governments’ prudent scal and monetary policies and a remarkably sound banking sector, it seems to have avoided the worst of the global storms and now, buoyed by the World Cup, it is already bouncing back. Most forecasters are predicting growth of around 3% this year (well above the government’s own budget forecast in February of 2.3%), rising to 3.5-4% next year. But that is still not nearly enough to create jobs on the scale needed to absorb the legions of the unemployed. Ocially, South Africa has an unemployment rate of 25%, the highest in the world. At its peak, in March 2003, it reached 31%. Last year a net 870,000 jobs 1 6 A special report on South Africa The Economist June 5th 2010 2 were lost. The racial divide is again stark: 30% of blacks are ocially unemployed, compared with just 6% of whites. Fully half of those aged 15-24 are without jobs. If those too discouraged to look for work are included, the adult unemployment rate jumps to 35%more than one worker in three. The Bureau for Market Research thinks the true gure could be as high as 40%. And South Africa does not have a thriving informal economy where the jobless can take refuge. OECD estimates put employment in the shadow economy at only 15% of the total, compared with around half in Brazil and India and nearly three-quarters in Indonesia. Many of the unskilled used to work in mining and agriculture, but both these sectors have been shedding jobs. Mining now accounts for a mere 2.3% of employment and 3% of GDP, down from around 14% in the 1980s. Having been the world’s biggest gold producer for more than a century, South Africa has fallen behind China, Australia and America. Some of its mines are nearing the end of their productive lives. But gold continues to be an important contributor to the economy, earning 49 billion rand in foreign exchange last year. That makes it the country’s second-biggest export after platinum, where South Africa is the global leader. It is also the world’s largest producer of manganese, chrome and vanadium as well as the fourth for diamonds and fth for coal. The world’s biggest diamond company, De Beers, is South African, and two of the world’s biggest mining companies, BHP Billiton and Anglo American, originated there. Agriculture makes up 5.1% of formal jobs and a mere 2.2% of GDP. Manufacturing is relatively small, providing just 13.3% of jobs and 15% of GDP. Labour costs are low, but not nearly as low as in most other emerging markets, and the cost of transport, communications and general living is much higher. Services are much the biggest part of the economy, accounting for around two-thirds of GDP. The government is keen to promote tourism, another potential source of unskilled jobs. The number of foreigners visiting the country has leapt from 3.7m in 1994 to nearly 10m last year. The World Cup should help boost numbers further. Two decades ago South African companies were largely restricted to their national base, but as trade and exchange controls were eased after 1990 they began to compete internationally. Today the country has a cluster of world-class companies, such as SABMiller, a brewer; Illovo Sugar, a low- 2 Below potential South Africa’s: 35 official unemployment rate, % 30 25 20 consumer prices* 15 10 5 + GDP* 199495 9697 9899 2000 01 03 02 05 04 0706 Sources: IMF; SAIRR 0 – 5 08 09 *% change on year earlier; 2009 estimate cost sugar producer; Alexander Forbes, a risk and benet consultant; Nampak, Africa’s biggest packaging manufacturer; Sasol, a petrochemical company; MTN, a mobile-phone operator; Rembrandt, a tobacco and industrial holdings group; and Investec, a nancial-services rm. But in the economy, as in so much else, South Africa is a country of extremes. The World Economic Forum’s latest Global Competitiveness Report ranks it among the top ten (of 133 countries) for the sophistication of its nancial markets, investor protection, the strength of its auditing and reporting standards, the ecacy of its corporate boards, the soundness of its banks and the regulation of its securities and exchanges. But it is among the bottom ten for the rigidity of its labour market, its maths and science education, the cost to business of crime and the availability of engineers and scientists. Overall, it comes a middling 45th for global competitiveness but attracts relatively low foreign direct investment. There are many reasons why the region’s leading economy, so rich in mineral resources, is failing to keep up with other emerging markets such as India or China. First, South Africa is a relatively small country without the advantage of a huge domestic customer base. Although the African continent contains a billion potential consumers, they are locked away in sovereign states with myriad di erent currencies, regulations and policies along with poor infrastructure and transport systems. Distances are vast, making trade dicult. Second, South Africa has for decades had an unusually low rate of saving and investment, partly because of political uncertainties. Third, it has long had an inadequate education system, resulting in an acute shortage of skilled manpower. Fourth, it has a strong and volatile currency, which deters investors and makes its ex- ports less competitive. Fifth, its infrastructure, though far better than in the rest of Africa, su ers from severe bottlenecks, including power shortages, and urgently needs upgrading. When the ANC rst took over, Eskom, the state-owned power utility, had excess capacity of 20%. Now, because of underinvestment, mismanagement and rapidly expanding demand, it is seriously short of generating capacity. For the past three years South Africans have struggled with repeated power cuts and rolling blackouts. In January 2008 the entire grid came close to collapse, forcing mines and other businesses to shut down. Last year’s recession helped to ease the pressure, but shortages are likely to continue at least until 2013-14, when two new clean-coal power plants are due to come on stream. Powering up Eskom is now pushing ahead with a massive 385 billion rand expansion programme. To help nance it, it has been granted permission to raise tari s by an annual 25% this year, next year and in 2012, having already almost doubled them over the previous ve years. In April the World Bank agreed to lend it $3.75 billion, the bank’s rst loan to South Africa since 1994. But Eskom is still seeking nance of nearly 200 billion rand over the next seven years. More than ever before, South Africa’s fortunes depend on what happens in the rest of the world, particularly in India and China. Last year China overtook America, Japan, Germany and Britain to become South Africa’s biggest trading partner, with bilateral trade reaching about 120 billion rand, over ten times what it was in 1998, when formal diplomatic relations were established. Chinese investments in South Africa totalled $7 billion over the period. South Africa hopes that China, and others, will see it as the gateway to around 170m consumers in the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC), a 15-country regional group. As South Africa emerges from the recession, business condence has reached a three-year high. But government debt has started rising sharply again and is expected to reach 40% of GDP by 2013, nearly double its level in 2008, as the government keeps spending on education, welfare, service delivery and cutting crime. It has also pledged to spend 846 billion rand on public infrastructure over the next three years, though some scepticism is in order. February’s budget envisaged no tax increases, but they may yet prove necessary. 7 The Economist June 5th 2010 A special report on South Africa 7 A new kind of inequality Black economic empowerment has had unintended consequences F OR centuries white South Africans had held all the country’s assets almost exclusively in their own hands. It was in order to spread this wealth a little more evenly that the ANC introduced black economic empowerment (BEE). But instead of beneting the mass of poor blacks, as intended, the policy has resulted in a few individuals beneting a lot, as Mr Zuma admitted earlier this year. He should know; he and many of his family members are among the lucky few. He has now vowed to make the scheme much broader-based. Under BEE laws white-owned companies with more than 50 employees and revenues of at least 5m rand a year are given a rating based on criteria such as how much of their equity is owned by blacks, how many of the top posts they hold, what training opportunities are open to them and so on. BEE targets are laid down by the government for each sector. The better a company’s level of compliance, the higher its overall rating and thus its chances of winning lucrative public contracts. With that carrot dangling in front of them, many white companies were happy to sell their shares to blacks at cut-rate prices or even give them away. Their new partners were expected to pay o their debts from rising share prices and dividends. As long as markets were rising, this worked well. Some black businessmen, such as Cyril Ramaphosa, a former trade union leader, Tokyo Sexwale, the current housing minister, and Patrice Motsepe, a lawyer turned mining magnate and South Africa’s rst black dollar billionaire, made fortunes. But when the global economy crashed and share prices plummeted, many BEE companies went to the wall. This has made new black investors wary. Last year there were just 13 BEE deals, worth 20 billion rand, with companies listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), compared with 111 deals, worth a record 105 billion rand, in 2007. The original idea for BEE actually came from white business leaders. Though some genuinely wanted to make the system a bit fairer, most saw it as a good way to ward o any attempt at nationalisation by the new black government. In that sense BEE has been a roaring success. Whites still hold the bulk of the country’s wealth. And though there have recently been renewed calls for the nationalisation of the mines and banks, in particular from Mr Malema’s Youth League, Mr Zuma still insists that this is not on the government’s agenda. For the poor black masses, however, the scheme has been a dismal failure. Moeletsi Mbeki, an analyst and entrepreneur (and brother of the former president), says that BEE has proved a parasitic drag on economic growth, having struck a fatal blow against the emergence of black entrepreneurship by creating a small class of unproductive but wealthy black crony capitalists. John Kane-Berman, head of the South African Institute for Race Relations, argues that the scheme has discouraged self-reliance and encouraged a debilitating sense of entitlement among blacks, as well as putting o foreign investors. It has also led to a lot of public tenders being awarded, often at inated prices, to family and friends of politicians and ocials. Terence Nombembe, the country’s rst black auditor-general, recently reported nding 49 public servants who were directors or owners of companies doing business with national-government departments. Almost all had failed to dis- It worked for Motsepe close their business interests or to declare that they were public employees when submitting their tenders. Barbara Hogan, minister of public enterprises, the department that hands out many of the juiciest tenders, has called for a new law to regulate such blatant conicts of interest. Yet the scheme is not without its merits. If nothing else, the rapid creation of a small black middle class has meant that black South Africans have not been left to languish in an undi erentiated lower class. It has also created role models for aspiring blacks. Most leading white businessmen believe that BEE is vital for the country’s future, though they would like it to be more broadly based and better implemented. Whose land? Land reform is another high-minded black-empowerment project that has gone awry. Under the 1913 Land Act blacks were not allowed to own, or even rent, land outside special black reserves. By 1994 some 87% of agricultural land was in white hands. The new black majority promptly announced plans to redistribute 30% of white-owned land to poor blacks within ve years. This was to be acquired by the state on a willing seller, willing buyer basis, at a fair market price. So far, barely 6% has been handed over, and the government has already run out of money. Many of the new owners have neither the skills nor the funds to run big farms, so fertile land often lies fallow. Mr Zuma has called for big changes to the willing seller, willing buyer model to enable the state to acquire land more quickly and cheaply. At one point it looked as if full-blown nationalisation might be on the cards, but the government now insists that this is not an option. However, there is talk of making white farmers transfer 40% of their farms by value to black shareholders, and possibly capping the amount of land an individual farmer can own. The minister for land reform recently warned white farmers that they should co-operate if they wanted to avoid creating a situation worse than Zimbabwe. Mr Zuma has since promised that there will be no violent land invasions, but fears remain, stiing new farm investment. 7 8 A special report on South Africa The Economist June 5th 2010 Hold your nose The smell of corruption I DIDN’T join the struggle to be poor, protested Smuts Ngonyama, then the ANC’s spokesman, in 2007. His comment epitomised a prevailing culture of entitlement in the ruling party. Paul Ho man of the Institute for Accountability in Southern Africa reckons that corruption is endemic throughout the public sector. This is at least in part because it is so easy to get away with, he says. From top to bottom, the attitude seems to be: if everyone else is able to act with impunity, why shouldn’t I? He estimates that about a third of the ANC’s current 83-member national executive committee have been investigated for fraud or other criminal activitiesincluding the president himself. Every day some new scandal seems to emerge. The head of Armscor, the state armsprocurement agency, was recently red for dishonesty, dereliction of his duties and disgraceful, unbecoming conduct. The boss of Transnet Freight Rail, the state freight-rail company, has been suspended, accused of not following tender rules. The former chief executive of South African Airways, the state airline, was sacked last year over alleged nancial wrongdoing. South Africa’s former police chief and onetime head of Interpol, Jackie Selebi, is on trial for corruption. The former head of the Social Security Agency has been red over allegations of nancial impropriety. One of the country’s leading barristers, Seth Nthai, was recently accused of soliciting a bribe and forced to step down as vice-president of the South African Bar. The list goes on and on. Willie Hofmeyr, head of the Special Investigating Unit, the country’s main corruption-ghting body, told parliament earlier this year that at least 400,000 civil servants were receiving state benets to which they were not entitled. A further 6,000 government ocials had failed to declare their private business interests, as required by law. In the department of prisons, ten ocials, including its former head, and ten prison doctors had been charged with corruption. A further 423 employees had been disciplined. His unit is now investigating more skulduggery at the department of public works, where suppliers, in cahoots with ocials, were found Local government is not working to be charging wildly inated prices. The ANC is worried. The scourge is far worse than anyone imagines, Mr Motlanthe, the country’s vice-president, admitted recently. Too many comrades regarded election to public oce simply as a chance to get rich, says Gwede Mantashe, the ANC’s (communist) secretary-general. We must move away from a culture of greed and self-enrichment to one of transparent accountability, urges the ANC’s treasurer, Mathews Phosa. Mr Zuma has vowed to take action. Many may sco . After all, the president was himself embroiled in corruption charges for years, escaping trial only when they were dropped on a legal technicality just before last year’s general election. But Mr Zuma seems to mean it. An interministerial task team has been set up to tackle corruption, chaired by Collins Chabane, minister for performance, monitoring and evaluation, a new post in the president’s oce. All ministers are being asked to sign performance agreements on which they will be judged. Public-procurement procedures are being centralised in the Treasury, and a team that includes the tax authorities and the auditor-general has been set up to check for any irregularities. If any ocials are found guilty, they must be red on the spot, not just redeployed, says Mr Zuma. Corruption is particularly bad in local government, where most of the money is spent. Hundreds of protesters have been taking to the streets to express their anger over the graft, nepotism, maladministration and sheer incompetence of their local councillors as well as over the lack of basic services. Last year there were more than 100 so-called service-delivery protests, four times as many as in 2008. This year the rate has been even higher. The current model of local government is simply not working, says Yunus Carrim, deputy minister for local government. Mr Zuma agrees. He recently described South Africa’s civil service as the worst in the world. Can’t get the sta Apart from graft and patronage, an acute skills shortage is also to blame. When the ANC rst took over, it cleared out most of the white civil servants, especially those in senior positions, by o ering them generous early-retirement deals. Within the rst ve years the proportion of whites in the civil service dropped from 44% to 18%. Their posts were generally lled by young, inexperienced and often poorly qualied ANC people. According to Solidarity, blacks now hold 61% of all top government jobs, whites 21%. Transformation has taken place too quickly and at too high a cost, 1 says the union’s Mr Buys. The Economist June 5th 2010 2 Matters have been made worse by the ANC’s system of cadre deployment, the appointment of loyal party members to well-paid public posts for which they are not necessarily suited or qualied. Mr Zuma has vowed to put a stop to the system. Whether this will happen is another question, but at least the problem has been acknowledged. The removal of the apartheid-era old guard was understandable, but it has had disastrous consequences. A 2007 study found a mere 1,400 civil engineers left in local government, just three for every 100,000 inhabitants, compared with 21 two decades ago. One-third of local authorities had no engineers at all. Just 7% of sewage-treatment plants meet international standards. Qualied nancial ocers too are in desperately short supply, as are chartered accountants, statisticians, doctors, nurses, teachers, managers, forensic scientists and detectives. The terrible shortage of human capital is now the single most important reason for questioning South Africa’s ability to A special report on South Africa 9 move forward, says Azar Jammine, head of Econometrix, a consultancy. A study by the Centre for Development and Enterprise at the end of 2006 found more than 300,000 unlled posts in national and provincial government, an average vacancy rate of 24%. At senior management level 35% of posts were unlled, rising to 59% at deputy director-general level. But it is not just the shortage of skilled manpower that is to blame, or even the ravages of HIV/ AIDs. Posts are sometimes left vacant when there is a perfectly suitable candidate available who happens to be white. Under the government’s transformation policies, each racial group is supposed to be broadly represented in every sector, private and public, and at every level, to reect its share of the population. However, with blacks accounting for just 44% of university graduates (but 80% of the population), there are often not enough suitably qualied ones to go around in the public sectorespecially as the best get snapped up by private companies, who have to comply with the same transformation targets. In the public sector transformation has nevertheless proceeded apace, with blacks now holding more than 80% of posts in some government departments. In the private sector, however, they have fared less well. A survey of some 300 JSE-listed companies by Business Unity South Africa, a lobby, found that blacks account for only 4% of chief executives, 2% of chief nancial ocers and 15% of other senior posts. On non-executive boards they do a bit better, accounting for 24% of chairmen and 29% of board members, but the gures are still way o target. In some of the state-owned companies another problem has arisen: too many blacks, often with good political connections, have been deployed above their capabilities. Some have fallen by the wayside. At the end of last year no fewer than ve big state-owned companies found themselves without a chief executive after their black bosses were sacked or forced to resign amid allegations of mismanagement, corruption or both. 7 The great scourges A black middle class is emerging, but poverty and crime blight millions of lives T EBOGO, aged 25, is a security guard in Johannesburg, earning just 11.38 rand an hour. Improperly classied as self-employed, he gets no paid holiday, sick leave or other benets. By dint of working a 12hour day, 25 days a month, he manages to earn 3,400 rand a month. Out of this he has to pay 250 rand rent to a friend who allows him to live in a one-room shack in his yard, next to seven others. Their 15 occupants share a single pit-latrine and outside water tap. Tebogo pays his employer 390 rand a month for transport and 98 rand for the uniform he is obliged to wear. Another 350 rand a month goes on maintenance for his six-year-old daughter. He also gives about 800 rand a month to his parents, who have no other source of income. In a good month that leaves Tebogo with about 1,500 rand for himself and his studies. He would like to become a radio journalist one day. Lindiwe is a 58-year-old cleaner for a block of oces. For an eight-hour day, ve days a week, she earns a basic 1,500 rand a month, which tips bring up to 2,100 rand That has to keep her, her unemployed husband and two grandchildren whom she looks after. Having inherited her parents’ home, she pays no rent, but spends around 55 rand a month on electricity, 30 rand on water and 300 rand a month on her onehour bus journey to work. During apartheid, she used to work as a domestic servant for a white family, living in a oneroom shack at the bottom of the garden and working 13 hours a day, seven days a week. On her one weekend o a month she would try to visit her two children who were being brought up by her mother in Soweto, a sprawling black township south of Johannesburg. Tebogo and Lindiwe are poor, but at least they have a regular job; many don’t. In 2008 three-quarters of South Africans had incomes below 50,000 rand a year. Of these, 83% were black (who make up 75% of the workforce) and just 6.5% white (13% of the workforce). Only 0.6% of South Africans earned over 750,000 rand, of whom three-quarters were white and 16% (or about 30,000 individuals) black (see table 3). A further 265,000 blacks were earning 300,000-750,000 rand, and 1.6m were get- 1 3 All right for some Total working population aged 16 and above by income group and race, 2008, % Total workforce Up to R50,000 R50,000 100,000 R100,000 300,000 R300,000 500,000 R500,000 750,000 Above R750,000 Black 75.3 83.0 65.9 47.1 29.9 20.3 16.3 Coloured 8.8 8.3 14.3 9.0 5.6 3.0 2.1 Indian/Asian 2.8 2.2 4.0 5.4 5.1 8.4 4.3 White Total workforce Source: SAIRR 13.0 6.5 15.7 38.5 59.5 68.4 77.4 100.0 75.5 10.1 10.7 2.3 0.8 0.6 10 A special report on South Africa 2 ting 100,000-300,000. That means nearly 2m black individuals (and probably three times as many if immediate family members are included) are now members of the newly emerging black middle class. Like their white counterparts, these so-called black diamonds tend to live in secure gated communities, send their children to private schools, take out private health insurance, work out in air-conditioned gyms, dine in fancy restaurants and buy expensive cars. It is at this level that most racial mixing and a few interracial marriages take place. Thanks to a massive increase in welfare spending, millions have been lifted out of the worst poverty. Since 1996 average black income per person has more than tripled in real terms, to nearly 20,000 rand. But average white income per person over the same period has risen almost as fast, to 136,000 randseven times as much as that for blacks. South Africa, always among the world’s most unequal societies, has become even more so. Those in the middle, too well-o to qualify for welfare grants but too poor to have joined the black middle class, feel particularly aggrieved. Black living conditions have nevertheless improved in other ways. Three-quarters of all South African families now live in a formal home (usually a concrete or brick bungalow instead of a rough shack or thatched mud hut), up from just under two-thirds in 1996. The vast majority now have electricity and access to clean piped water (see table 4). Half of black families have ushing loos, compared with barely a third in 1996; three-quarters have a television; and eight in ten have access to a phone, usually a mobile. Many municipalities provide a basic amount of water, electricity and sanitation free to poor families. Expectations soared when the ANC rst swept into power promising a better life for all. Yet many see little improvement in their own lives, nding themselves without a job in the same rickety shacks as before. They feel trapped. A study by the Medical Research Council highlights the deep unhappiness and growing sense of alienation among the young in particular. One in ve teenagers aged 15-17 had tried to commit suicide during the preceding six months; 29% had been binge-drinking at least once in the previous month; 19% had become pregnant or fathered a child; 20% were overweight. According to another study, four out of ten black and three out of ten white and Indian youngsters aged 13-15 feel so disillusioned that they want to get out of the The Economist June 5th 2010 country as soon as they can. Those young people are increasingly taking to the streets to vent their anger, looting stores, blocking highways and attacking the police with petrol bombs and rocks. The police retaliate with tear gas, rubber bullets, water cannon and, some claim, live ammunition, adding to the sense of insecurity in the townships. When it comes to tackling crime, though, the police, poorly paid, inadequately sta ed and often corrupt, are regarded as pretty hopeless, and the poor cannot afford to pay for their own protection. The middle classes, on the other hand, black as much as white, barricade themselves behind layer upon layer of security: high perimeter walls topped with electric fencing, guard dogs, barred doors and win4 Home comforts Living conditions, % of households 1994 2009 Formal dwelling 64* 75 Access to clean piped water 62 89 Flush lavatories 51 60 Telephone in dwelling/ use of cellular phone 29 85 Electricity for lighting 51 83 Electricity for cooking 47* 71 Refuse removal by local authority 53* Source: SAIRR 53 *1996 dows and alarm systems linked to one of the many armed private security forces. Many go to live in one of the increasingly popular fortress-like gated communities, protected around the clock by armed guards. South Africa now has 300,000 private security guards, almost double the number of police. Since 1996 the government has almost tripled its spending on tackling crime. But private-sector spending has risen even faster. Victims all The crime situation in South Africa has become so severe that the sad reality is that it’s not if, but when, you will become a victim, said a Durban magistrate when sentencing three men for throwing a teacher o a high bridge after hijacking her car last November. We are scared to the point where we are no longer free. Max Price, the normally unappable vice-chancellor of the University of Cape Town, said after the murder in March of yet another member of the university’s sta : We no longer trust strangers and we hate what we have become. These are not Mr Mbeki’s hysterical white whingers. They just want their country to rid itself of this evil. The World Competitiveness Survey rates South Africa worst out of 133 countries for crime. A staggering 50 murders, 100 rapes, 330 armed robberies and 550 violent assaults are recorded every day. More than the level of crime, it is the sheer gratuitousness of the violence that is shocking. A 12-month-old baby is beaten to a pulp by house burglars in an upmarket Johannesburg suburb. A shopkeeper pleads with robbers to take everything he has but spare his life; they shoot him anyway. A man mowing his lawn in Cape Town is shot dead for the sake of his mobile phone. Under apartheid most crime was contained within the poor black townships. Now it is everywhere. It is not only whites who complain; everyone is afraid. In one recent poll, nearly two-thirds of South Africans said they would feel very unsafe walking alone in their neighbourhood after dark. Another study in 2007 found that 22% had had personal experience of crime in the preceding year. Six in ten South Africans believe that crime has risen since 1994. Yet, if the ocial statistics are to be believed, the crime rate for the 21 most serious o ences has actually fallen by 17%. The rate of murder and attempted murder has almost halved; that of violent assault is down by a quarter; and that of burglary of residential properties has dropped by 15%. However, a new study by the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation nds a pervasive pattern of (police) manipulation of the statistics, particularly since the government announced in 2004 that it aimed to cut crime by 7-10% a year. That could account for much of the apparent reduction in crime. The murder statistics are probably pretty accurate, though. These show that the murder rate dropped from 66.9 per 100,000 people in 1994-95 (when a virtual civil war was raging in KwaZulu-Natal) to 37.3 in 2008-09. This still leaves South Africa among the world’s ten most murderous countries. America has a rate of 5.4 per 100,000, England and Wales 1.2 and Japan 0.4. Rape, on the other hand, is usually vastly underreported. The police say that sexual o ences have risen by nearly half since 1994, to more than 70,000, about half of them rape. But the real gure for rape is probably nine times as high, says the Medical Research Council. In a recent study of men aged 18-49, 28% admitted at least one rape. Four in ten women say their rst ex1 perience of sex was rape. The Economist June 5th 2010 2 Sexual violence seems to be less shocking to black communities than to white ones. According to another CSVR study, most black women believe that a man has a right to have sex with his wife whenever he wants. A majority of teenage boys and girls say it is not sexual violence to force sex on someone you know or who has accepted a drink from you. Human Rights Watch, a New York-based lobby, thinks the level of violence against women in South Africa is shockingly high. Mr Zuma takes anxieties over crime more seriously than Mr Mbeki did. South Africa’s citizens have been allowed to live in fear for too long, he says. He has promised to boost target police numbers from A special report on South Africa 11 183,000 to 205,000 over three years, upgrade their training and make it easier for them to use lethal force. Not everyone is happy. A total of 568 people were shot dead by police in 2008-09, including 32 innocent bystanders. Over the same period 107 police ocers were killed. Harsher punishment has been tried, with tough minimum sentences introduced in 1997, but seems to have had little e ect. It did, however, push up the prison population by 40% to 165,000, proportionately one of the highest in the world. Almost half of all convicts are now serving sentences of ten years or more, compared with under 2% in 1995. The number of inmates on remand has doubled and now accounts for a third of the prison population. Some 234,000 cases are awaiting trial. At the present rate of hearings it would take ten years to clear the backlog, the government admits. South Africans constantly debate why their country is plagued by so much violent crime. The blame is variously put on the brutal legacy of apartheid, widespread poverty, appalling levels of unemployment, the absence of a father in two out of three black homes, high alcohol and drug abuse, and extremes of inequality. All may play a part. But the UN says that there is no easy correlation between poverty, development levels, inequality and crime, so it cannot be the whole answer. 7 Last in class Education needs to take a giant leap S OUTH AFRICA spends 6.1% of its GDP on education, a bigger chunk than most other countries, yet its results are among the worst. In the World Economic Forum’s latest Global Competitive Index it ranks bottom (out of 133 countries) in both maths and science education. In the 2006 Progress in International Reading and Literacy Study it also came bottom (out of 40 countries), as it did in the 2003 Trends in International Maths and Science Study (out of 48 countries). Humiliated, it withdrew from the next TIMSS in 2007. The diculty with such studies is that they reect averages. At the top, South African students do as well as anyone, but the great majority are performing way below their capabilities. Graeme Bloch of the Development Bank of Southern Africa describes South Africa’s education system as a national disaster. He reckons 80% of schools are dysfunctional. Half of all pupils drop out before taking their nal matric exams. Barely 11% get a good enough pass to qualify for university. Of those who do, most are found to be functionally illiterate and innumerate when they get there, requiring intensive rst-year remedial classes to bring them up to scratch. A third of students drop out in their rst year at university. After ve years only one in three has obtained a (three-year) degree. Even then, employers say that many graduates emerge inarticulate, unable to think critically and barely able to read or write. Black South Africans generally do much worse than whites. Almost 13% of black adults are functionally illiterate, compared with 0.4% of whites. Fewer than 2% of black adults have a degree, compared with 17% of whites (which is still low by international standards). Barely a third of black pupils pass their matric, whereas almost all whites do. And only around one in 20 black students ends up with a degree, compared with almost one in two whites. It is not that the blacks are any less bright; some perform brilliantly. They are just massively disadvantaged. Under apartheid blacks were deliber- ately kept down, given a vastly inferior education and banned from most skilled jobs. Explaining the government’s new Bantu (black) education policies to the Senate in 1954, Hendrik Verwoerd, then minister for native a airs, famously asked: What is the use of teaching a Bantu child mathematics when it cannot use it in practice? By the end of Verwoerd’s decade as prime minister in 1968 the government was spending 16 times more on the education of a white child than a black one. Spending per pupil is now the same for black and white, yet black children gener- 1 More snakes than ladders in South Africa’s schools 12 A special report on South Africa 2 ally continue to fare worse than whites be- cause most of them continue to attend vastly inferior schools. Although public education was desegregated in 1994, most former black schools remain overwhelmingly black because they are generally in deprived black areas, whereas the former white schools tend to have a good racial mix because middle-class blacks have moved into their catchment areas. Catering for just 10% of all pupils, the former white schools are usually much better endowed, better run and far more disciplined than former black schools. Angie Motshekga, the schools minister, admits that black schools are in crisis. Fewer than 10% have libraries or laboratories. Very few o er extracurricular activities. Most of their teachers are not properly qualied. Black schools tend to lack leadership and are often plagued by drugs, alcohol and sex abuse (by teachers as well as older boys). Their pupils generally come from poor, often broken homes. And, unlike white pupils, they are usually taught in a language (English) that is not their own, by teachers who themselves cannot speak it properly. It often seems a miracle that black pupils make it to university at all. Most of those who do will probably have been either to one of the top 10% of black schools that do perform well, or to a former white The Economist June 5th 2010 Positive discrimination At university level black students have made similar strides. In 1994 half of South Africa’s 528,000 university students were black; now two-thirds out of 800,000 are; a quarter are white. But university standards vary hugely. Jonathan Jansen, the rst non-white vice-chancellor of the University of the Free State, says that at least three-quarters of South Africa’s 23 highereducation establishments are fraudulent and bad, not really universities at all. He cites exam standards being lowered to cut failure rates; students who regularly trade their bodies to pass their exams; others who blame their poor marks on racist teachers; and those who blatantly cheat and threaten to secure that piece of paper. According to Mr Jansen, South Africa has no great universities, only six or seven good ones. One of them is the University of Cape Town, the only African university to be ranked among the world’s top 200 by the Times Higher Education Supplement. Under the leadership of Max Price, UCT has introduced a controversial new entrance scheme that makes it easier for non-whites to get in. This can mean that white students have to get a matric mark some 20-30 percentage points higher than their black peers. Mr Price, who is white, admits that the system is not perfect, but at least it takes account of the huge handicap su ered by most black applicants. Mr Zuma has vowed to make education his government’s priority number one. In speech after speech he insists that teachers and pupils must be in school, in class, on time, learning and teaching for seven hours a day. It might seem obvious enough, but in South Africa it will require a small revolution to achieve. Mr Zuma also plans to bring back the apartheid-era’s hated schools inspectors, but in future they will be called assessors and required to support teachers as well as criticise them. Independently monitored tests are being introduced for pupils aged nine, 12 and 15, doubtless as much to spot the incompetent teachers as the failing pupils. 7 practitioners have left the country, fed up with the poor pay and appalling conditions. Others have gone into the rapidly expanding private sector. A study in 2007 found that one-third of public medical posts were unlled. In some hospitals the vacancy rate for nurses is as high as 60%. The public sector now has just one doctor for every 4,570 inhabitants, against one for every 600 in private medicine. For specialists the disparity is even greater. Under apartheid, public health-care for whites, like education, was generally so good that there was little need for private medicine. Even health services for blacks were often a lot better than they are now. The service has deteriorated so much that more than 8m South Africans (17% of the population) have taken out private medical insurance. Half of them are black. The at-rate basic premium, set by the government, is 800 rand per month for an individual and 2,000 rand for a family, regardless of age or state of health. A further 20% of South Africans use the private sector occasionally and pay as they go. In all, South Africa spends some 8.6% of its GDP on health, close to the international average. But the public sector accounts for only 41% of that total, compared with 82% in Britain, 79% in France and 46% even in America. In an attempt to bridge the gulf between public and private health care, the government has proposed introducing a national health-insurance scheme. This has sent private health-care users into a tizzy, especially when a purported draft proposal seemed to suggest that 85% of their health-insurance premiums would be incorporated in the new scheme, and that 1 school, or to one of the burgeoning private schools. Fees for day pupils range between 5,000 and 80,000 rand a year. But with class sizes generally half those in state schools and an average matric pass rate of 97%, compared with just 30% at state schools, even some relatively poor parents think they are worth paying for. Under apartheid few white parents bothered to send their children to private school because the state schools for whites were of such high standard. Now nearly 400,000 pupils (3% of the total) attend private schools, more than double the number in 1995. Six out of ten of them are black. Don’t get ill Or if you do, go private O N TAKING over as minister of health a year ago, Aaron Motsoaledi declared himself shocked by the state of the public health-care system. Media horror stories about dirty and overcrowded hospitals, long waiting times, lack of medicines and a shortage of medical sta were largely true, he admitted: I don’t think it will be an exaggeration to say that some of our hospitals are death traps. Money is not the main reason. The government is pumping over 100 billion rand into the system this year, which amounts to 12% of its budget and 3.7% of GDPnot massive, but more than most provincial governments (who are responsible for health care) know how to spend. The main problem is once again an acute shortage of qualied sta . Many thousands of publicsector doctors, nurses and other medical The Economist June 5th 2010 A special report on South Africa 13 2 any service provided by the public sector would no longer be covered by private health schemes. If true, that would be a sure way to cause a massive further braindrain. However, as the scheme would cost anything between 165 billion and 244 billion rand, it seems unlikely to be introduced in the near future. The silent killer South Africa’s HIV/AIDs epidemic, exacerbated by a decade of AIDs denialism under Mr Mbeki, who claimed the disease was not caused by HIV, is putting a huge extra strain on the public health system. The number infected is now put at around 6m, or one in eight South Africans. An estimated 3m people have already died from the disease and over 350,000 more are succumbing every year. New infections run at about 1,350 a day, though the rate may have started to come down. Some 1m su erers, under two-thirds of those in need, are now receiving antiretroviral treatment. The consequences of the epidemic have been devastating. Countless families have lost their breadwinner; hundreds of thousands of children have been orphaned; desperately needed skilled workers are being cut down in their prime. It is often said that HIV/AIDs knows no barriers, striking indiscriminately at rich and poor, young and old, men and women. But in South Africa there is a huge racial disparity: 14% of the black population is infected, against 1.7% of coloureds and only 0.3% of whites and Indians. Poverty is a factor, but cultural di erences also play a role. Research shows that black males in South Africa tend to be more promiscuous and have more sex and more concurrent 5 Grim reaper HIV/AIDS Life expectancy years* HIV/AIDS prevalence among 15-49 year olds†, % 65 25 60 20 55 15 50 10 40 5 0 1994 9596979899 2000 01020304050607080910‡ Sources: Actuarial Society of South Africa; Economist Intelligence Unit *2008-09 estimates †2005-09 estimates ‡Forecast sexual partners than other racial groups. In March the government announced a campaign to get 15m peopleone in three of the populationtested for HIV/AIDs by June next year. Mr Zuma, not always the most careful in his own personal relations, agreed to spearhead the campaign. Condom use has already been boosted by government advertising campaigns. The government is also planning a large-scale male-circumcision programme because studies have shown that circumcised men halve their chance of infection. A Johannesburg medical centre has begun o ering lunch-break quickies at 400 rand a snip. One in three black South African males already undergoes ritual circumcision, but such operations are usually done by unqualied people and cause hundreds of deaths a year. Zulus have traditionally shunned the practice because it would keep them away from the battleeld that called the warrior tribe. However, last year their king, Goodwill Zwelithini, told them to forget the battleeld. Mr Zuma, himself a Zulu, announced last month that he had been circumcised some time ago. The HIV/AIDs epidemic has caused the average life expectancy in South Africa to fall from over 60 years to below 50 in the past two decades. Here again there are huge racial di erences. Whereas a white South African can still expect to live for 72 years, his black compatriot can look forward to only 47. South Africa also performs badly on infant and maternal mortality and tuberculosis, for which it has one of the world’s highest infection rates. Alcohol abuse is another big health problem. Although 60% of South Africans (mainly women) claim not to drink at all, those who do tend to go over the top. Directly or indirectly, alcohol is responsible for 30% of all hospital admissions. Twothirds of domestic violence is alcohol-related, as are three-quarters of knife murders and at least half of all road deaths. South Africans are also among the world’s highest users of various illegal drugs. Consumption of dagga (cannabis), cocaine and tik (methamphetamine or speed) is two to three times the world average, says the country’s Central Drug Authority. Drug and alcohol abuse are partly responsible for the carnage on South Africa’s roads, where the death rate is 33 per 100,000 inhabitantsalmost double the world average. For the size of its population the country has relatively few vehicles, fewer than 9m, yet last year some 16,000 people were killed on its roadsvictims of speeding, huge pot-holes and road rage, as well as the easy availability of a driving licence for a small bribe. 7 Still everything to play for The case for optimismand the many caveats T WO decades ago South Africa was a mess, economically, politically and psychologically. The world treated it as a pariah. A racial conagration seemed not only possible but likely. Since then it has come a long way, led by people who were completely new to running anything much, let alone a big, sophisticated and highly complex country. It was inevitable that mistakes would be made. Today South Africa is a lot happier, wiser and more prosperous. It has been welcomed back into the international community, is a member of the G20 group of important countries and is the biggest mover and shaker in Africa. Yet the new South Africa’s relations with the world are often confused, almost schizophrenic, as it struggles to understand what it is and what it wants to be. On the one hand it likes to see itself as the hegemon of southern Africa and a global leader of the emerging world, along with China, Brazil and India. On the other hand both its economy and its values remain closely allied with those of the rich world. In Africa it is an economic giant, yet, despite its black-led government, it remains a political pygmy, unableor unwillingto solve problems even in its own backyard of Zimbabwe. Its foreign policy is a muddle. For all his charm and bonhomie, Mr Zuma appears to have little interest in maintaining the globetrotting activism of his predecessor, Mr Mbeki. Besides, he has his hands full at home. 1 14 A special report on South Africa The Economist June 5th 2010 You can do it if you try 2 Freedom has yet to deliver on its promise. Vast numbers of South Africans continue to live in grinding poverty as the rich get ever richer. Hundreds of thousands are scythed down by diseases such as HIV/ AIDs and tuberculosis. Others succumb to criminal violence or the carnage on the roads, robbing families of breadwinners and businesses of employees. The economy cries out for more skilled workers, yet millions remain unemployed and unemployable. Universities dumb down their courses to boost pass rates, only to turn out graduates who are not much good to anyone. The government seeks to woo foreign investors, but people like Julius Malema send shivers down their spines by insisting that mines and banks will be nationalised within the next few years. Rising discontent in the poor black townships threatens to boil over into renewed violence. Revolutions, as de Tocqueville noted, tend to start with rising expectations, not when conditions are at their worst. Even if the government could give the jobless everything they are demanding, which it cannot, that still might not be enough. The pessimists’ case Laurie Schlemmer, director of MarkData, a research rm, thinks that social and political instability, a marginal concern since 1994, could become a determining factor in South Africa’s future. He fears that whites will become the scapegoats for the government’s failings. Once an optimist, he now describes himself as a pessimist because so little has been done to reduce inequalities. John Kane-Berman of the South African Institute of Race Relations believes the country is already irretrievably set on the path to becoming another failed African state. Too many things, he says, are going wrong at the same time, mutually reinforcing each other. Some, like Fanie du Toit of the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation, feel South Africa could still go either way, either grad- ually sliding into a corrupt third-world mess or making slow progress without ever fullling its potential. But others remain doggedly optimistic, despite the country’s obvious failings. One of them is Tembeka Ngcukaitobi, aged 34, a former partner in one of South Africa’s top commercial-law rms and now head of the Legal Resources Centre’s Constitutional Litigation Unit, a public-interest law concern. Brought up in a village in the former homeland of the Transkei, where his Xhosa-speaking mother (a domestic worker) and father (a gold miner) were sent under apartheid, he attended the local village school when not looking after the goats and cattle. Yet, through sheer determination and hard work, he made itwithout the help of BEE, armative action, political connections, patronage or graft. Though dismayed by the obstacles facing his country, he believes they can be overcome. Compared with what my parents lived through, I have to feel inspired by my country’s potential, he says. Bobby Godsell, chairman of Business Leadership South Africa, a lobby representing the country’s 80 biggest compaO er to readers Reprints of this special report are available at a price of £3.50 plus postage and packing. A minimum order of ve copies is required. Corporate o er Customisation options on corporate orders of 100 or more are available. Please contact us to discuss your requirements. nies, and a member of the government’s new National Planning Commission, thinks South Africa could become to the African continent what Japan was to Asia in the 1950s and 1960s. We’re leading the modernisation of a continent of one billion people with huge unmet needs, he says. Even the usually relentlessly negative Bill Johnson, a political analyst and former Oxford don, admits there is hope. There’s a complete failure of governance, of course, he growls, yet I love South Africa. I would not want to live anywhere else. There’s a dynamism in this country, a resilience. It’s already come through a lot of ghastly experiences. It can do so again. Today’s South Africa is not for the fainthearted. Everything is in ux and nothing is certain. But a new, better-educated and less racially obsessed generation is coming through. In the decade I’ve been in business, I’ve never been more afraid or excited at the same time, says Iqbal Survé, head of Sekunjalo Investments, a black private-equity company: Afraid because we don’t have the necessary skills and investments to make the economy grow fast enough to ensure political and social stability. Excited because there are so many opportunities. The price of freedom, Archbishop Desmond Tutu likes to remind his fellow countrymen, is eternal vigilance. That is what the opposition parties, the press, the courts, the NGOs, some business and union leaders and a few academics are all striving to maintain. Together they make a formidable group. Powerful forces are ranged against them, but the fundamentals are there, insists Mr Ngcukaitobi. Our future lies in our own hands. 7 Future special reports Human genome June 19th Debt June 26th Gambling July 10th Egypt July 17th Latin America September 11th Forests September 25th Send all orders to: The Rights and Syndication Department 26 Red Lion Square London WC1R 4HQ Tel +44 (0)20 7576 8148 Fax +44 (0)20 7576 8492 e-mail: [email protected] For more information and to order special reports and reprints online, please visit our website Economist.com/rights Previous special reports and a list of forthcoming ones can be found online Economist.com/specialreports