Why president Zuma fired his finance minister
By Mzukisi Qobo
By Mzukisi Qobo
A fine technocrat who did not wear his position on his
sleeve, and known for tapping into his soft power of persuasion, Nhlanhla Nene
has now been shunted out of South Africa’s National Treasury. The man who was South Africa’s Finance Minister has been
forced to make way for an obscure politician, David van Rooyen, who was on the
backbenches of parliament.
There are very few things that are surprising about South
African politics, in particular the president’s decisions. In 2012 a
Constitutional Court judgment described a key appointment President Jacob Zuma
had made in the justice ministry as “irrational”. Since then irrationality and
Zuma have become synonymous.
One of the difficulties in analysing developments in
South Africa is that political decision-making does not fit any neat theory in
political science. The president is unpredictable. His policy thinking is
woolly.
Zuma’s sense of South Africa’s political and economic
vision is shrouded in destructive ambiguity. This helps him to consolidate his
authority in the ruling party, but it weakens the country’s institutions.
Nene’s legacy
The decision to fire Nene as Finance Minister has shocked
many. It immediately sent ripples through the financial markets. In understanding the president’s frame of mind it is
important to remember that Zuma is not an institutionalist leader whose primary
concern is to defend the country’s institutions and safeguard its economic
well-being. It is a leap of faith to believe that a leader who has several
times shown his inability to pronounce a figure of less than R1 billion can
preside over a R4 trillion economy and still appreciate its complexity.
Nene’s appointment as finance minister in 2014 was
quickly welcomed by international markets. His technocratic flare and understanding
of the country’s complex economic challenges endeared him to political parties
across the spectrum. Before his appointment he had been chairperson of the
portfolio committee on finance and then deputy finance minister.
During his tenure he reinforced the importance of
macro-economic stability and prudential fiscal management. He announced a cap
on government spending and made a commitment to rein in the budget deficit
which had grown to 4% of the GDP.
He spoke openly about the need to cap above-inflation
wage increases for public sector workers, even though he later conceded to
their higher demands. He continued along the path set by his predecessor Pravin
Gordhan, eliminating wasteful government spending. This included spelling out
limits to expenditure on flights, hotels and entertainment.
Why Nene was fired
The crux of Nene’s fall is not easy to decipher. But two
factors seem to have driven the final nail into his professional coffin. The first has to do with his hard stance on the country’s
state-owned airline, South African Airways. Nene challenged the board of the
state-owned airline, led by Dudu Myeni, to reconsider its intended
restructuring of a fleet arrangement with Airbus. The restructuring would have
had fiscal implications with the government being forced to make good on its
guarantees.
Second, it is apparent that Zuma found the National
Treasury, and Nene in particular, a stumbling block to a nuclear deal the
President is believed to have promised the Russians. It is estimated that the
deal could cost as much as R1 trillion. Nene’s allocation of a mere R200m
towards research for this programme must have been seen as an insult by Zuma’s
cronies and insiders.
Zuma believes that this nuclear deal will be a magic
bullet for South Africa’s urge to undertake industrialisation on a large scale,
address energy deficits and create employment. He may turn out to be right on
some of the outcomes, but the push to flout procurement rules and avoid
accountability signifies a destruction of institutions.
The likely, and more menacing scenario, is deepening
corruption. This is more so given Russia’s impoverished corporate governance
culture. The nuclear deal, if implemented, could create a feeding trough on a
gigantic scale for cadres and cronies while acting as a debt albatross for
future generations.
At the heart of both the South African Airways saga and
the nuclear deal is the failure by the country’s leadership to adhere to
accountability and transparency mechanisms, especially the Public Finance Management
Act, as well as to grasp the implications of irrational decision-making on the
fiscus and the economy.
A bad omen for South Africa
The markets or economic actors are not familiar with Van
Rooyen, Nene’s replacement at the helm of National Treasury. He clearly is
someone Zuma considers malleable. The appointment itself was handled clumsily
with no forewarning to the markets. This was a serious mistake given the
strategic importance of National Treasury. The department stands at the nexus
between the domestic economy and global markets.
What we can draw from these changes is that National
Treasury has now lost its place of pride as a premier economic nerve centre for
government. The cavalier manner in which Zuma has treated this crucial
institution will have implications for the economy.
Investor confidence will be negatively affected, and
trust in the ability of the ruling party to provide economic leadership
severely eroded. Further, there will be a heightened sense of political risk,
making it even harder to convince investors about South Africa’s profile as an
investment destination.
The public debt, which is already hovering close to 50%
of the GDP, will balloon, with implications for fiscal sustainability in the
future. Delivery of quality public services, public sector wages, and ability
to modernise infrastructure will suffer further.
To hope for faster economic growth and job creation under
such a scenario is a pipe dream.
What will get South Africa out of the quagmire is a
revolt within the ruling African National Congress to challenge Zuma to explain
himself and to provide a credible plan to reform and manage the economy.
Second, the local government elections due to be held in
early 2016 should be a platform to rebuke government for its shambolic
management of the economy.
Editor’s note:
Mzukisi Qobo, Associate Professor at the Pan African
Institute, University of Johannesburg
This article was originally published on The
Conversation.
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