Last Thursday evening I shared a platform at the Wanderers golf club with economist Mike Schussler and DA colleague Khume Ramulifho on the topic of jobs. The event was the second in a series organised by Dalu Cele, a councillor in the City of Joburg, aimed at giving the public perspectives on current issues from the outside (a guest speaker) and inside (two DA public representatives).
You can read my speech below.
Good
evening ladies and gentlemen, it’s a pleasure to see you all here at the second
Inside Out event organised by my
colleagues Dalu Cele and Nicci Rahn.
I
want to begin by offering a few thoughts on where political philosophy and
ideology fit into our discourse on the economy and job creation.
Political
philosophy and ideology have become very unfashionable words in South Africa.
They have been supplanted by words such as vision, mission and brand identity,
in a world where spin doctors like Lynton Crosby and faceless officials have
come to dominate our language.
But
we need to understand the political philosophies that underlie the main actors
in South Africa’s polity to understand how economic policies flowing from them
impact our daily lives.
The
ANC, in government for close on 25 years, is fundamentally a socialist party
with leanings towards Marxist Leninism.
This
dates to the Freedom Charter but has greater expression in the National
Democratic Revolution which is the driving force of ANC ideology. In the NDR, the
state is the main actor in society and the economy.