Articles in The Economist expressing
the view that South Africa is sliding downhill might benefit the
country, the SA Institute of Race Relations (SAIRR) said.
The magazine's latest issue includes an
editorial on South Africa entitled "Cry the beloved country",
and a report entitled "Over the rainbow".
They both suggest a failure of
leadership in South Africa had resulted in the country sliding
backwards since democracy was introduced in 1994.
According to the editorial: "Since
Mr Mandela retired in 1999, the country has been woefully led,"
referring to former president Nelson Mandela.
The SAIRR said it was in broad
agreement with both articles.
"The institute has read both
reports and can say that the data cited by The Economist is broadly
accurate."
The institute's deputy CEO, Frans
Cronje, said: "The Economist reports will obviously have an
impact on investor sentiment. In the short term the impact will be
negative and will cause damage to the economy."
However, he predicted the criticism
could help South Africa in the long term.
"In the long term, however, it
will alert people, in government, the business world, and outside, to
the need for urgent policy reform.
"What has happened in the weeks
since the Marikana shooting, both in terms of ratings agency
downgrades and the latest report from The Economist, is a much-needed
correction in opinion about South Africa."
Some 46 people were killed in
strike-related violence at Lonmin's platinum mine in Marikana, near
Rustenburg, in August and September.
A more realistic understanding of South
Africa would lead to a more accurate assessment of its problems,
Cronje said.
"Without dramatic shifts in policy
it is no longer possible for the current government to meet the
demands of actors within South African society," he said.
According to The Economist South Africa
was "on the slide both economically and politically".
The editorial points out that the
mining sector had been "battered by wildcat strikes, causing the
biggest companies to shed thousands of jobs in the face of wage
demands and spreading violence".
It said foreign investment was drying
up, service delivery protests were "becoming angrier",
education was "a disgrace", and inequality had grown.
It admitted the country had made some
progress, such as in providing housing and welfare services.
"But the party's [African National
Congress's] incompetence and outright corruption are the main causes
of South Africa's sad decline."
According to The Economist it was
problematic that: "Nearly two decades after apartheid ended,
South Africa is becoming a de facto one-party state."
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