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After the Bell: You may prefer to sit out Sona 2024. Don’t

The ANC is in a corner here, and when politicians feel they are cornered, they instinctively reach for the cookie jar.
After the Bell: You may prefer to sit out Sona 2024. Don’t

My guess is that President Cyril Ramaphosa, amid a long-view defence of ANC performance, will make two important announcements and two important promises in his State of the Nation Address (Sona) on Thursday, 8 February. 

The two important announcements will be the new CEO of Transnet and the 2024 elections date. The two important promises will be the continuation of the Covid-era unemployment grant, currently scheduled to end in March 2025, and the implementation of the National Health Insurance (NHI) system.

This guess is not a huge punt from left field; I think it is pretty widely speculated that these will be some of the focus issues. It also stands to reason: the ANC is in a corner here, and when politicians feel they are cornered, they instinctively reach for the cookie jar. 

That the party is in a corner is also pretty obvious, but perhaps the underlying reasons are misunderstood. Because of its huge support base, the ANC’s proportion of the vote is very highly correlated with voter turnout. Total voting-age population turnout in the past three general elections has declined from about 60% in 2009 to 58% in 2014 and to just below 50% in 2019. This is slightly different from formal turnout, which is the proportion of registered voters who cast a ballot; that was 66% in 2019. 

Either way, with each decline, the ANC’s share of votes has declined in very close relative proportion. Consequently, it’s not as though the ANC is losing support in the way that the opposition parties would like to believe (or have us believe); it’s more that the ANC is losing popular enthusiasm. To combat that, the ANC is not proposing to change its policies; why should it? It sees its existing policies as having been successful. 

What it’s trying to do is regain popular enthusiasm by doubling down on its existing strategy. The aim is not so much to win new voters but to convince existing voters to vote for precisely the things they voted for previously. More or less.

The ANC, then, is in a corner because this “get out and vote” idea is not landing very effectively. Analysts think the turnout this time will be between 55 and 60% of eligible voters, and while that’s pretty bad news for the ANC, it’s by no means fatal. Loosely speaking, this would bring the ANC’s proportion of the vote to below 50%, but not so much that it would be unable to cobble together a new government with a few smaller parties.

But for South Africa, this process of trying to spur voters into voting by promising a basic income grant and NHI is ominous. The basic income grant will cost about R40-billion a year and go to about eight million recipients, putting a level of stress on the budget, but is arguably doable. 

Whether poverty support should take this form is, of course, another debate. Personally, I like the fact that it is a cash grant rather than a work-benefit system like the Expanded Public Works Programme because the simplicity of a cash transfer is something of a corruption mitigator. But the amount spent on booze is worrying. 

The NHI is a different matter. We have no clue whatsoever how much this is going to cost, but between R200-billion and R500-billion a year seems likely. If it were implemented tomorrow, the deficit (the difference between what the government brings in tax and what it spends) probably rises from the unsustainable 6% it is now to the totally ridiculous level of around 10% a year.  

It makes you wonder why the ANC is not seeing the problem here. The positions of Eskom, Transnet, the SA Post Office, Sanral, the Land Bank and a host of other ailing government institutions are all linked. Losing control of the budget means vital investment is delayed to pay immediate expenses, which over time reduces the quality of services, which means that customers find alternatives, which increases the stress on the organisation, which means good staff leave, which all contribute precipitously to the downward spiral. And so on.

I suspect the average ANC MP has no idea what the difference is between a 3% deficit and a 10% deficit; it seems so small. Allow me to elucidate: 3% is handleable, 10% is death, not just of the government but of the whole country. A 3% deficit means borrowing around R178-million a day; a 10% deficit means borrowing R600-million per day. Every day. Including Sundays.

That means less capital for all other potential borrowers, which means growth slows, which means the deficit rises. Foreign investor holdings in SA’s bond market are already at a record low. And if the ANC does not recognise this now, trust me, it will later. As Margaret Thatcher once famously said: eventually, socialists run out of other people’s money. DM

Comments

Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso Feb 7, 2024, 11:59 PM

Hmm, an ominous picture but not sure it compels me to suffer through what is sure to be a tedious, depressing fait accompli.

JDW 2023 Feb 8, 2024, 08:11 AM

Agreed. Great article from Tim as usual, but sitting through the SONA has become an exercise in preventing an aneurysm due to the associated frustration involved.

Peter Atkins Feb 8, 2024, 07:18 AM

If the EFF we’re going to put on their usual show it might be worth watching but I will be lazy and wait for our many political analysts to digest SONA for me. Thanks guys!

Chris Lee Feb 8, 2024, 07:25 AM

I'll read about it later. Not sure my TV screen would survive the assault.

Denise Smit Feb 8, 2024, 07:25 AM

It is worse than what you think. In a televised interview quite a number of years ago N Dlamini Zuma was asked a question about the number of dysfunctional local authorities. She demonstrated on national TV a inability to calculate percentages. 35% she calculated as 3,5%. Go back to the old TV shots and you will see

Geoff Coles Feb 8, 2024, 09:11 AM

Did she now.....at least she has announced her retirement!

Sergei Rostov Feb 8, 2024, 07:32 AM

"It makes you wonder why the ANC is not seeing the problem here." What is there to wonder about?

Dermot Quinn Feb 8, 2024, 08:20 AM

CR will take 2 hours to say what can be read in about 30 seconds, I can afford him the 30s.

Grant S Feb 8, 2024, 08:29 AM

Perhaps provides some clarity on the lack of any real action against corruption. Steal it now, while there's something left to steal.

Hari Seldon Feb 8, 2024, 08:34 AM

We need a constitutional requirement to have obtained at least 60% in matric maths to serve in parliament. It would be interesting to know the facts around how many people in parliament have a working knowledge of statistics on some benchmark test. To assess legislation and its impact on the country surely this should be a requirement.

Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso Feb 8, 2024, 05:22 PM

...or to vote? It would upset in the short term for sure but would certainly be to everyone's benefit ultimately, and possibly even result in more of our youth staying the educational course.

Jana Krejci Feb 8, 2024, 08:36 AM

xxx

Paul Caiger Feb 8, 2024, 08:39 AM

Listening to anything that comes out of the mouth of an ANC politician is equivalent to listening to scraping nails on the blackboard ( for those who remember) or Dale Haye's golf commentary - excruciating , irritating and to be avoided.

Con Tester Feb 8, 2024, 08:43 AM

See Rico's cartoon published on this platform today. Why subject oneself to the agonising cerebral torture of listening to Ramaposeur's vapid, blusterous, self-congratulatory bloviation and BS when his avuncular verbal diarrhoea will in any case be probed, prodded, pressed, and pricked from all conceivable angles in the days to come?! #NotWatchingSONA.

Geoff Coles Feb 8, 2024, 09:13 AM

Indeed, an excellent cartoon....which I had already passed on to friends.

Peter Holmes Feb 8, 2024, 09:22 AM

Agreed

Rae Earl Feb 8, 2024, 08:48 AM

In our home, the minute Ramaphsa starts waffling his usual SONA shit about ANC accomplishments, we'll switch to our nightly watching of the series 'Slow Horses". . So, probably 5 minuets of SONA and then escaping to another hour of the mesmerising Gary Oldman dishing out wonderfully crisp and searing dialogue. Ramaphosa would be well advised to get Mick Herron to write his speeches as opposed to the wooden monologues he spouts at every opportunity.

D'Esprit Dan Feb 8, 2024, 09:31 AM

Would 5 minuets of SONA constitute a sonata?

Geoff Coles Feb 8, 2024, 09:10 AM

Nothing could get me to listen to Ramaphosa..... a quick summary is enough.

D'Esprit Dan Feb 8, 2024, 09:26 AM

I like the way you term (possibly inadvertently) the BIG as 'poverty support', because that is exactly what it is: at R350 a month, it's roughly 1.5 days work of the new minimum wage. This works out to around R4,900 a month (without overtime, bonuses etc.). However, government's own EPWP minimum wage is around half of that at R15 an hour or R2,640 a month (based on 22 working days a month). The formal sector minimum wage is double in SA compared to what it is in Vietnam, a key global manufacturer which is taking jobs out of China. Interestingly, Vietnam's minimum wage is pretty much what government pays under EPWP, so why can't the private sector pay the same for entry-level, unskilled workers? Vietnam's unemployment rate is around 2.3% to our 40%+, but government would rather have our people living on the humiliation of R350 per month, than the opportunity to earn around seven times that - and have the opportunity to learn skills and move up the income chain. Every time the ANC boasts about how many people exist on paltry grants in SA, it is actually a brutal reminder that they would rather have people living in penury than being part of a workforce that grows the economy, creates jobs, (not the 'jobs opportunity' sophist BS of the ANC), increases the tax base and reduces the percentage of tax spent on piffling handouts - money that could be used to improve infrastructure, healthcare and the like. Once more, ideology trumps reality in South Africa.

Con Tester Feb 8, 2024, 10:08 AM

But it wasn’t very long ago that Ramaposeur publicly and with overweening joy proclaimed the burgeoning number of social grant recipients to be one of his government’s great successes! ?

D'Esprit Dan Feb 8, 2024, 11:01 AM

Yip - institutionalised poverty is success to the ANC, as long as it's in line with their brutal doctrinaire approach to rule.

nina.bodisch Feb 8, 2024, 01:39 PM

I've been to Vietnam twice in recent years, and NOWHERE do you see people sitting around in miserable dejection on street corners or begging at street lights for charity. There is a flourishing entrepreneurial spirit of can-do amongst the Vietnamese. And their history beset by colonialism and war has certainly not been plain-sailing, but they have been able to look forward and seemingly escape the trauma of the past. We can only but wish for the same trajectory for our country....under different leadership.

jeremiah1959 Feb 8, 2024, 09:32 AM

Tim you have nailed everything which needs to be observed.

Jesse.doorasamy Feb 8, 2024, 09:33 AM

"My fellow South Africans. Having witnessed the number of beggars grow at every robot and stop street over the years of me travelling in my cavalcade and looking at the desperation and utter hopelessness in their eyes I have come to the realisation my party and I are incapable of running this country. I am ashamed and offer my unreserved apology and immediate resignation." We can live in hope!

Rory Macnamara Feb 8, 2024, 09:38 AM

Thanks Tim, you have spelt out the SONA content for us so no need to sit through it. appreciate it.

Phillip O'connor Feb 8, 2024, 11:46 AM

I read the above, and realize, we have come to a cross road in our country. It is not about the people it is about inept politicians, who live in luxury, have their motorcades, and ignore the people. CR has proven himself to be incapable of doing the right thing, that is getting rid of inept Ministers. I will not believe anything he says tonight, so what is the point of listening. He is desperate, and it shows, not even Mbeki is willing to step in on their behalf.

Middle aged Mike Feb 8, 2024, 11:51 AM

Fat thieves in expensive clothes blowing bubbles. No thanks.

Jan Nel Feb 8, 2024, 12:04 PM

As a concerned father of four, I detest our national deficit of leadership and accountability. What remains of the future we once believed to be ours?

Confucious Says Feb 8, 2024, 01:15 PM

The only thing different about the 2024 SONA speech will be the thesaurus that Ramaphosa reads from!

Lisbeth Scalabrini Feb 8, 2024, 02:19 PM

To create an objective opinion, we must follow up on everything, not only what we like, but especially what we don't like. We cannot express a view, if we do not have sound knowledge of what we are talking about.

Stephen Paul Feb 8, 2024, 05:30 PM

I wonder with great sorrow how can there be 40% support for cANCer. How can there be 10% support? The question is facetious. The old truism applies - people get the government they deserve. In S A more than most others, even if the country is dying and their voters with it, old loyalties die very hard. Unfortunately the great majority of cANCer sufferers do not read the Daily Maverick. Will there even be an election or do we see the beginnings of a manufactured fake conspiracy theory regime change threat from some outside malign Western/ Zionist/ Imperialist plot so that " Sorry people. We have to declare a State of Emergency". Indefinitely.

Iam Fedup Feb 8, 2024, 06:07 PM

A good analysis, Tim, but you have stated exactly why I refuse to listen to the imbecilic rubbish that Ramaphosa will spew out. Call it denial if you want to, but the less I hear from the ANC, and the more I can avoid paying even one cent of my hard rearmed money for tax, the better it will be for me. And you are completely right when you say the opposition is delusional... it’s wishful thinking that the average SA voter will boot them out, because in spite of overwhelming evidence that they are liars, thieves and utterly devoid of any competence, they will still put a cross in the wrong place. If I could afford to leave on an international flight tonight, I’d be on it. But what I can do is not have them in my life or in my media at all, and I can use any means, legal or illegal, to not support their thievery through my taxes.

ian_mich22 Feb 9, 2024, 06:15 PM

You think? Think and Alleged are two much overly used words in SA today