logo
South Africa must revive its industrial ambitions

South Africa must revive its industrial ambitions

Mail & Guardian07-06-2025
Neglecting existing infrastructure generates higher long-term costs.
South Africa's industrial decline is accelerating. State-owned enterprises that once drove economic transformation now epitomise institutional failure. Eskom's power cuts cripple manufacturing. Transnet's rail network deteriorates while ports struggle with backlogs. The Industrial Development Corporation, established to finance industrialisation, limps along with a compromised balance sheet.
This infrastructure was built on the vision of Jan Smuts, prime minister from 1919 to 1924 and 1939 to 1948. While his commitment to racial segregation was morally reprehensible, his approach to economic development offers lessons for today's policymakers grappling with sluggish growth and persistent inequality.
Smuts understood that South Africa needed to transcend its role as a commodity supplier to Britain's industrial economy. His developmental state model, combining strategic state investment, international partnerships and technocratic competence, transformed the country from a mining enclave into Africa's most sophisticated industrial economy.
The foundations he laid endured for decades. The Electricity Supply Commission (later Eskom) provided cheap power that enabled large-scale manufacturing. The Iron and Steel Corporation (Iscor) supplied essential inputs for further industrialisation. His successors built on these foundations, establishing Sasol for synthetic fuels and the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research.
Today, these institutions are shadows of their former selves. More troubling, the country appears to have lost the capacity for the long-term thinking that created them.
South Africa's economic performance tells a sobering story. Growth has averaged just 0.8% annually over the past five years, well below the rate needed to reduce unemployment or meaningfully tackle poverty. The Gini coefficient, measuring income
The benefits of black economic empowerment (BEE) policies have accrued primarily to political and economic elites, while the rest remain excluded from meaningful economic participation. The debate over the benefits of BEE has resurfaced, particularly concerning its mechanisms for wealth distribution. This has been highlighted by the recent scepticism surrounding the potential introduction of Starlink to South Africa, with concerns about exceptions to BEE compliance.
Nonetheless, it is undisputed that, as a result of transformative
Moreover, the state capture scandal, where politically connected individuals systematically looted public resources, represents the nadir of this failure, which has been accounted for by the collapse of Transnet and Eskom, the consequences of which are signified by inefficiencies thereafter. Despite the Zondo state capture commission spending more than R1 billion investigating the theft, many implicated figures retain positions of influence.
Why do voters continue to elect leaders who have demonstrably failed them? The answer lies in how persistent unemployment, poverty and inequality make populations vulnerable to manipulation by the very politicians who created these conditions.
The contrast with Smuts's approach is stark. He prioritised competence over patronage, choosing Hendrik Johannes van der Bijl, a German-educated engineer with US business experience to integrate the country's fragmented electricity supply. Van der Bijl's technical expertise, combined with political backing, enabled the creation of a power system that underpinned decades of industrial growth.
Today's leaders talk about infrastructure development but have forgotten a crucial lesson: maintenance matters more than new construction. Neglecting existing infrastructure generates higher long-term costs than building new capacity. Johannesburg's collapsing central business district exemplifies this short-sightedness. Years of deferred maintenance have created a crisis that will cost far more to resolve than it would have cost to prevent.
The rot runs deeper than poor maintenance. It reflects a broader failure of vision and leadership. Where Smuts aligned South Africa with international partners to attract investment and expertise, contemporary leaders often prioritise political survival over economic transformation.
South Africa does not need to resurrect Smuts's racial ideology; his vision of white supremacy was both morally bankrupt and economically counterproductive. But it needs his approach to state-led development, clear vision, international partnerships, infrastructure investment and, above all, competence in execution.
The formation of a government of national unity after the 2024 elections suggests political leaders recognise the scale of the crisis. The question is whether they possess the vision and competence to address it.
As Smuts understood, South Africa's prosperity depends on reliable electricity, efficient transport and industrial capacity. These foundations are crumbling. Without urgent action to rebuild them, the country risks becoming a case study in how great institutions can be destroyed by poor leadership.
The blueprint for revival exists in South Africa's own history. The question is whether anyone has the courage to follow it.
Ashley Nyiko Mabasa holds master's in economic and labour sociology focused on energy policies and master's in public policy and governance focused on data governance, and is co-chairperson of the Brics Youth Council.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Some MK members jealous of Duduzile and my relationship with Zuma'
‘Some MK members jealous of Duduzile and my relationship with Zuma'

Mail & Guardian

time5 minutes ago

  • Mail & Guardian

‘Some MK members jealous of Duduzile and my relationship with Zuma'

MK party spokesperson Nhlamulo Ndhlela. (@NhlamuloNdhlela/X) uMkhonto weSizwe ( The party's constitution stipulates that those in parliament cannot have full-time positions, but Ndhlela is also a legislator and a member of MK's 'high command'. Former party leader Jabulani Khumalo and former secretary general Ndhlela and Sambudla-Zuma have also been accused of being rude to other members and although Zuma has been happy in removing others accused of similar transgressions, the two have not been disciplined. Some party members have also accused them of behaving as if they are founding members of the MK party who cannot be told what to do. In an interview with the Mail & Guardian, Ndhlela said since the formation of the party on 16 December 2023, there had been a coordinated attack on him and Zuma-Sambudla. The two are believed to be the leaders of the so-called 16 December faction of the party, which claims to represent its founders rather than those who joined from other political movements after the This faction says these 'incompetent' newcomers have been elevated to senior positions, sidelining founding MK members. 'From day one, if you recall, there were three faces in the announcement of uMkhonto weSizwe. It was president Zuma, Dudu and I handling the media in terms of the questions and answer session.'. Before the 2024 elections there had been no internal party friction, Ndhlela said. 'So you can tell it's a coordinated attack on Dudu and Nhlamulo, after that they said we are in a relationship and now they are saying we are disruptive and that's a lie.' Ndhlela has also been accused by Shivambu of taking drugs. Without mentioning her name, Shivambu accused Zuma-Sambudla of posting on social media and insulting him while drunk. This was after she, in February, wrote on X that Shivambu was 'the worst thing that happened to MK', describing him as 'useless'. She also posted 'Fuck you Floyd', although she did not tag Shivambu in any of her posts. Zuma-Sambudla had to apologise and the party assured its members and the public that she would appear before the disciplinary committee, but this, according to insiders, has not been done. Ndhlela has also been accused by the party's MPs of being the author of a fake letter leaked to news channel eNCA, which claimed that the party's caucus in parliament was calling for its chief whip, Some insiders said Ndhela had done this to counter a letter the party's deputy president and parliamentary leader, Hlophe accused Ndhlela of repeated instances of being rude, arrogant and dismissive of communication toward parliamentary members and senior leaders, undermining the dignity and collaborative spirit needed in the whippery team. He also accused him of creating divisions among parliamentary members through perceived factional and counterproductive behaviour. Ndhlela said on television that he had not been removed as the party's whip of communication in parliament. He said Hlophe's letter was fake. Hlophe then held a briefing to clarify that the letter was authentic and Ndhlela had removed as a whip. Sources said Sambudla‑Zuma and Ndhela had also approached Zuma in a bid to influence him and to disparage Makhubele and Hlophe, but Zuma 'wouldn't hear anything of it'. Earlier this month, the M&G reported that the party was set to discussZuma-Sambudla and Ndhlela's conduct, but sources said this has not happened. Ndhlela told the M&G that Shivambu — who has since been axed as secretary general over an unsanctioned trip to Malawi — was among those who had coordinated the attack on Sambudla-Zuma and himself. 'At one point, she's taking drugs, then I'm taking drugs, you can just tell it's character assassination to try and drive a wedge between ourselves and the president so they can actually go for the kill,' he said. Asked if Ndhlela had appeared before him following the remarks by Hlophe, MK party disciplinary chair Ndhlela said: 'There's no need for a [hearing]. I resigned as a whip long after what was alleged to have happened. I was a whip of communication under [Mzwanele] Manyi, I stepped down under Manyi to give her [Makhubele] the whip of communication. I wanted to step away from the whippery and they requested that I stay in the whippery but deputise her, which I accepted.'

Tesla approves $29 billion in shares to Elon Musk
Tesla approves $29 billion in shares to Elon Musk

The South African

time35 minutes ago

  • The South African

Tesla approves $29 billion in shares to Elon Musk

Tesla announced an 'interim' compensation award worth about $29 billion for South Africa-born Elon Musk on Monday, asserting the need to retain the controversial CEO at a moment of fierce competition for top talent. The electric vehicle maker said in a statement it will award a distribution of 96 million Tesla shares to Musk as it 'intends to compensate its CEO for his future services commensurate with his contributions to our company and shareholders.' The award comes as Tesla challenges a Delaware court ruling that struck down a 2018 package of about $55.8 billion. With that appeal dragging out, Monday's announcement marks an interim step while the company develops a 'longer-term CEO compensation strategy,' Tesla said in a letter to shareholders. 'We have recommended this award as a first step, 'good faith' payment,' said the letter. 'Retaining Elon is more important than ever before.' The move comes amid a fierce battle for top engineering talent as companies like Google and Meta compete for leadership on artificial intelligence. The Tesla letter, signed by Tesla board members Robyn Denholm and Kathleen Wilson-Thompson, described Musk as a 'magnet for hiring and retaining talent at Tesla,' noting that Tesla is transitioning from its electric vehicle focus 'to grow towards becoming a leader in AI, robotics and related services.' Musk is viewed within the business world as a unique talent after his success with building Tesla and SpaceX into major global companies. But his stewardship at Tesla has come under scrutiny in the last year as car sales and profits have tumbled. This trend has been partly due to Musk's support for far-right political causes, but also is related to a sluggish rollout of new auto models after the polarizing Cybertruck sold poorly. In a July 23 Tesla earnings call, Musk warned of more potentially 'rough' quarters ahead before the company's robotics and AI ventures pay off. On the call, Musk reiterated his concern about the current framework in which he holds about 13 percent of Tesla shares prior to Monday's award. 'As I've mentioned before, I think my control over Tesla should be enough to ensure that it goes in a good direction, but not so much control that I can't be thrown out if I go crazy,' Musk said. Tesla's statement did not explicitly mention Musk's foray into politics, which has sparked consumer boycotts and vandalism. But the letter by Denholm and Wilson-Thompson alluded to concerns that Musk's attention had drifted from the company, calling the interim package a step towards 'keeping Elon's energies focused on Tesla.' The massive pay package comes eight months after the judge in a Delaware court rejected Musk's even larger compensation at Tesla, denying an attempt to restore the pay deal through a shareholder vote. Musk would be required to forfeit the new compensation package should the appeals court rule in his favor and grant him the full 2018 compensation, which at the time was valued at $55.8 billion. The new payout is sure to fuel concerns about the compensation for Musk, already the world's richest man, and whether the Tesla board is placing a sufficient check on the company's chief executive. Tesla shares rose 2.4 percent on Monday in early trading. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news. By Garrin Lambley © Agence France-Presse

Ramokgopa to visit Medupi and Matimba Power Stations as Eskom reports progress
Ramokgopa to visit Medupi and Matimba Power Stations as Eskom reports progress

IOL News

time2 hours ago

  • IOL News

Ramokgopa to visit Medupi and Matimba Power Stations as Eskom reports progress

Eskom's power system stabilises, ensuring reliable electricity supply. Image: Timothy Barnard /Independent Newspapers Electricity and Energy Minister, Dr Kgosientsho Ramokgopa, will visit Medupi and Matimba Power Stations, Eskom said on Monday. The power utility said the visit formed part of the continued oversight on Eskom's Generation Recovery Plan, with a focus on improving the reliability and performance of its power plants to end load shedding and ensure a more stable electricity supply. "This is to celebrate the early return to service of Unit 4, now contributing 800MW of capacity to the national grid, reinforcing the goals of the Generation Recovery Plan and offer the minister an opportunity to receive an update on the Control and Instrumentation refurbishment project at Matimba," Eskom Spokesperson, Daphne Mokwena said. Ramokgopa is expected to give South Africans an update on power system status, operational improvements, and the Generation Recovery Plan, and to also engage the Generation Group Executive. Ramokgopa is expected to provide another update on power system performance on Friday; however, the utility has committed to communicate any unplanned developments before. This comes at the back of the utility making strides in stabilising its power system with an improved Energy Availability Factor (EAF), ensuring reliability during peak electricity demand. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad loading South Africa has been spared of load shedding since May 15, Business Report recently reported that Eskom's generation fleet is steering towards greater stability, with 57% of its 14 coal-fired power stations now functioning at an EAF exceeding 70%, with three stations having surpassed a 90% operational efficiency. This is a great move towards relieving South Africans of their long struggle with load shedding, which has often been associated with a lot of undesired conditions, i.e, crime, damage to household appliances, and business failures. The utility's winter outlook, as published in May, indicated that load shedding will not be necessary as long as unplanned outages stay under 13,000 MW. According to the power utility, load shedding gets implemented as a last resort to prevent a total collapse of the power grid. The Star

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store