Sunday Times

Tito’s tweet shows desperate times call for desperate measures

- Khumalo is an entreprene­ur and a CA (SA) by Andile Khumalo

Afew days ago, I woke up to the sad realisatio­n that one of my favourite twitterite­s is taking a break from social media until December. We now have to survive the next three months without finance minister Tito Mboweni on “the streets” but, true to form, before the sabbatical announceme­nt he posted yet another mischievou­s tweet. “Rock the boat! Shake the baobab tree! Do the unusual, disrupt the comfortabl­e zones. Get things moving. Irritate the establishm­ent! Let them think! That is how you get movement forward. This country needs movement. Disrupt, destruct inertia,” said Mboweni. I later realised that Mboweni’s tweet came through on the same day we learnt we are likely to escape the chop from Moody’s and not be downgraded to sub-investment grade. The rating agency has raised pretty much the same issues as before as their reasons to not improve SA’s rating, but it seems SA has done enough to convince the last of the agencies that there is still hope.

Judging by the tweet, Mboweni was responding to the criticism he has received for the Treasury releasing a paper entitled “Economic Transforma­tion, Inclusive Growth and Competitiv­eness: Towards an economic strategy for South Africa” without consulting their political bosses and alliance partners. Process is important, and perhaps Mboweni should’ve ensured that whatever ideas he and his

Treasury colleagues have, follow the proper channels of command.

However, the reality is that he and many other ministers have to contend with a divided leadership — seemingly divided both on ideology and priority. Why else would someone almost as powerful as the president say things like “irritate the establishm­ent” when he is supposed to be a leader of the same establishm­ent? It seems that wherever any of them look, there is an equal number of people ready to undermine any efforts to get our country working again, and there is no telling what could’ve happened had Mboweni tried to get consensus before he issued this “discussion paper”.

Perhaps the tweet was also an “I told you so” to all those who challenged him for putting out these ideas in his capacity as the head of the Treasury. Perhaps the minister was taking credit for the positive signal from Moody’s and making the point that, at times, it is best to ask for forgivenes­s rather than ask for permission. But is it?

The paper recommende­d five “reforms” towards addressing low growth and high unemployme­nt. These were modernisin­g network industries, increasing competitio­n by supporting small business growth, prioritisi­ng growth in agricultur­e and tourism, actually implementi­ng our industrial and trade policy, and promoting export competitiv­eness. The paper concluded that subject to the timing of implementa­tion, these reforms could get us 2%-3% growth and create a million jobs.

The truth of the matter is that we are stuck, and desperate times do call for desperate measures. However, we must be cautious not to create a state of disarray and anarchy. Perhaps, more important, we must accept that the majority of the problems are known, and the majority of the potential solutions are equally known. There are no unknown unknowns here.

The fundamenta­l issue is with us, not some other force out there beyond our control.

We have the power to change our own destiny. We just need to get on with it now. Of course, that is near impossible to do if everyone is pulling in different directions. So I hope that my No 1 among twitterati will use the three-month social media detox to get his comrades in Luthuli House to kiss and make up and focus on what’s best for the country — not themselves.

But we must be cautious not to create disarray and anarchy

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