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A workshop co-hosted by the Southern African Regional Poverty Network (SARPN) and the Centre for Civil Society

ENGAGING NEPAD: GOVERNMENT AND CIVIL SOCIETY SPEAK TO ONE ANOTHER

4th July 2002
[Workshop programme]     [Papers]

Workshop paper > Tanya van Meelis


NEPAD: What's in it for Labour?

By Tanya van Meelis
Trade and Industry Policy Co-Ordinator at Cosatu


Presented to the Southern Africa Research Poverty Network (SARPN) and Center for Civil Society workshop on "Engaging NEPAD: government and civil society speak to one another"
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Notoriously, unions and the other major groups in civil society argue that they have been largely left out of the NEPAD process. We here briefly analyse NEPAD's proposals on governance and economics.

This analysis relates to the NEPAD base document from late 2001, which was formally presented to COSATU in May 2002. But NEPAD's proposals are still being developed and refined. Furthermore, foreign governments and the World Bank have set up programmes that use the name of NEPAD but are not necessarily initiated by African governments or derived from NEPAD documentation. NEPAD itself is so vague on economic commitments that it lends itself to just about any programme.

The great strengths of NEPAD are its claims as an initiative originating in Africa, and its insistence on democracy. The labour movement has been at the receiving end of too many repressive regimes-including in Swaziland and Zimbabwe-to reject that position.

Despite these strengths, however, NEPAD still seems to aim primarily at engaging overseas donors. Indeed, its core strategy appears to be a trade off, in which Africa offers improved economic and political governance in return for increased foreign aid and investment. This trade off also lies at the heart of the World Bank's current strategies. An effective development strategy would have to do much more to mobilise and empower Africans both politically and economically.


NEPAD's overall strategy

As it stands, the NEPAD base document essentially argues that economic stagnation and poverty in Africa result from low foreign investment, which in turn results because of weak states. Following colonialism, NEPAD says, African states were too weak-mostly due to "a shortage of skilled professionals and a weak capitalist class" [sic-weak labour is not a concern]-to bring about development. NEPAD argues specifically that many African countries "lack the necessary policy and regulatory frameworks for private sector-led growth." In other words, the strengthening of the state is to strengthen capital, not to restructure it or give a voice to the majority.

NEPAD's strategies therefore start with proposals to strengthen capitalist democracy and end conflicts. The governance proposals focus on strengthening the state so that it can protect property rights in a sustainable way, which in turn requires a sufficient degree of democratic rights (free speech and elections) as well as measures to address the worst effects of poverty. The state should also provide key public goods-NEPAD stresses infrastructure, education, healthcare and support for smallholders in agriculture.

To strengthen the state itself, the NEPAD base document focuses quite narrowly on improving public finances. It does not, however, specify how improved public financial management will be measured. Instead, it proposes a task team of central bankers and ministries of finance to review national policies and establish standards and codes of good practice.

The risk here is that the composition of the task team is narrow, and composed of leaders whose main aim is to control government spending and avoid inflation. That means that the team may call for inappropriately restrictive policies. In contrast, making economic governance responsive to developmental needs requires the involvement of those engaged in carrying out developmental tasks-ministers of agriculture, trade and industry and welfare, for instance.

In short, NEPAD's focus on good governance could in theory lay a basis for more equitable development. In practice, faced with fiscal restraints governments typically end up cutting anti-poverty programmes, while continuing to free up markets. The net impact can be highly negative for the poor and ultimately for sustainable development.

NEPAD's economics are notoriously vague. Beyond setting ambitious targets for growth and poverty alleviation, they provide little more than a set agriculture and infrastructure as priority sectors, and call for regional integration. In other words, there is almost no detail on how the growth target will be achieved, except through increased foreign aid and debt relief. There is certainly no clear strategy for restructuring African economies to ensure growth and development. Thus, the main proposal for manufacturing is to establish national standards bodies-certainly a worthy aim, but one hardly likely to bring about rapid industrialisation.

A major concern for COSATU is the emphasis on privatisation as the route to expand infrastructure. Most countries in Africa have even less regulatory capacity than South Africa. In these circumstances, where the poor cannot pay for services, the private sector will not provide them. Infrastructure can then become, not a motor for broad development, but a luxury for the rich and for foreign investors.

It seems that the reason the economic proposals are so vague is that the real focus of the programme is not on the underlying economic issues, but on how to attract foreign funds through better governance.

In sum, despite some ringing anti-colonial rhetoric, NEPAD ultimately seeks primarily to make Africa more attractive to foreign capital. The positive side of its strategy is that it recognises the need for a strong, democratic and non-corrupt state that can undertake anti-poverty measures. The negative aspect is that strong limits are set on that state, by restraining its ability to spend as well as by looking increasingly to the private sector to provide basic services.

At an analytical level, the fundamental problem with the NEPAD governance and economic strategies lies in the unquestioning assumption that development must start by strengthening capital. That assumption has two basic flaws.

First, it is true that strong capital is needed to develop a capitalist economy. But different fractions of capital play very different roles in the economy. Simply strengthening business, without defining which groups are needed for development, can have a highly negative effect. In South Africa, for instance, supporting the dominant mining and finance groups seems likely to lead to greater movement of capital out of the country, as they explore options abroad, rather than to higher investment or rising living standards for the poor. When the South African economy is not growing very rapidly, foreign investment may actually undermine and weaken local capital.

Second, strong capitalist countries also need strength in other classes. NEPAD refers only fleetingly to labour, smallholders in agriculture, micro producers in the towns, and the professional classes. Yet these groups must play a central role in any effective, popular development strategy. Leaving them out means there is precious little incentive for the majority of Africans to mobilise to support NEPAD.

Finally, the very vagueness of the NEPAD document underscores a question about how far continental initiatives can go. We need to develop practical proposals for dealing with the problems of southern Africa. If we can make the subregion work, then we will have a far better chance at addressing the problems of the continent as a whole.

Toward an alternative

A more effective development strategy would focus more on empowering the majority of Africans both politically and economically. From this standpoint, the main obstacles to development are massive inequality and repressive states. That effectively gives real power to foreign capital and a few local, often corrupt, allies. Moreover, mass poverty, combined with small populations in most countries, means there is little incentive to invest to meet domestic needs.

Indeed, internationally, social development and economic growth have occurred only where governments have intervened extensively to bring about greater equality in incomes and wealth as well as rising skill levels. Central to achieving this objective are consultative policy making on the economy in the context of a strong state-driven strategy to support domestic investment and production.

Critical aspects of an effective development strategy thus include:
  1. Norms for greater popular participation in policy making as well as mass mobilisation around key projects. NEPAD needs to address the closed and oppressive nature of the inherited state structures, as well as the nature of the capitalist class itself. The establishment of consultative structures like NEDLAC would be a step in the right direction.
  2. Programmes to ensure more equitable control of productive assets. That requires a stronger public sector as well as support for a co-op movement, skills development, land reform and assistance to small and micro enterprise. It also needs more consultative policy making on the economy, so that governments cannot be captured by a clique of big businesses, most of which are based overseas.
  3. Strategies to raise living standards for the poor, through government spending on social services and basic infrastructure as well as measures to encourage production of basic necessities. This approach would require a clear commitment to ensuring that fiscal strategy is sufficiently relaxed to support growth and development, without leading to unsustainable debt. In that context, the issue of debt relief becomes critical, since many countries have had to cut back radically on spending already as a result of excessive debt-service costs. NEPAD does call for debt relief, but does not link it to its fiscal proposals.
  4. Special measures to address the needs of historically disadvantaged groups, especially people in the least developed rural areas and women.



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