Finance
minister Trevor Manuel advocated spending cuts, the
dismantling of trade barriers and fighting inflation
during the past six years, all under the guidance
of World Bank economists.
He is still waiting for the payoff. South Africa's
economic growth has topped 4 percent only once since
the mid-1990s. A third of the workforce is jobless.
The government has faced a wave of strikes driven
by anger at the slow gains in living standards since
apartheid ended in 1994.
Now, Manuel and even some World Bank officials say
Africa's largest economy has not gained as expected
from the lender's advice.
Their disappointment has implications for the 100
developing nations. That each year get more than $15
billion in World Bank loans, along with guidance on
opening their economies to trade and investment.
"South Africa did everything the World Bank
said they should and more, and yet it's not working,"
says Patrick Bond, a professor at Wits University.
"They failed in getting growth, employment or
redistribution."
The setbacks in South Africa's economy take on a
new resonance this weekend as Manuel, a former anti-apartheid
campaigner in the slums of Cape Town, becomes head
of the bank's development committee at its annual
meeting in Washington.
He is, in effect, the chairman of the bank's board.
Manuel takes over at a time when critics from Argentinian
President Eduardo Duhalde to development groups in
Uganda and protesters on the streets of Washington
say that what officials in the US call the "bitter
medicine" of reform is not curing the maladies
of weak growth and poverty.
Manuel says South Africa needs to boost spending
to prime the economic pump - and he has the blessing
of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World
Bank's sibling lender, which usually advocates belt-tightening
to curb budget deficits.
"Developing countries have undertaken many reforms,
but the benefits are, in fact, very slim," says
Manuel.
Most economists say keeping inflation low and opening
markets help boost growth.
World Bank researchers say nations such as India,
Mozambique and Vietnam have benefited from the lender's
guidance.
Still, across Africa, governments followed advice
from the bank and the IMF by cutting deficits from
7 percent of gross domestic product (GDP)
in 1992 to 2.6 percent in 2000, Manuel says.
Exports grew by almost half during the 1990s as trade
restrictions were dropped and government control over
economies was loosened, according to the bank.
For all that, economic growth has stagnated and per
capita income has fallen.
Forcing poor countries to lower trade barriers undercuts
local businesses, according to the Structural Adjustment
Participatory Review Network, an activist group.
Curbing food subsidies means they rely on imports
and focusing on inflation first means economies are
not given a chance to grow.
Manuel complains that rich governments such as the
US and those of the European Union push poor nations
to lower trade barriers, yet maintain their own subsidies
on food and textile products, making it difficult
for the countries to benefit from more trade.
"Are we too stupid or too poor?" Manuel
asks.
The World Bank itself says it focused too much in
Africa on budget cuts and curbing inflation, and not
enough on building other conditions for economic growth.
These include curbing corruption, strengthening rules
protecting foreign investors and reining in bureaucracies.
"It's a fair criticism that the World Bank put
too much emphasis on stabilisation and formal trade
liberalisation over the past decade," says David
Dollar, a bank economist who has written studies showing
that countries that open their economies prosper.
Still, the bank says the countries that have fared
the worst during the past decade have been those hardest
hit by civil wars and the Aids epidemic, as well as
those that failed to control spending.
Uganda, which has been promised $1 billion in loans
from the World Bank and got $1.3 billion of its debts
cancelled in late 2000, has been held up as an example
of how adopting simple measures can turn around a
country.
Now the bank is warning that the collapse in coffee
prices means Uganda's debts may spiral out of control
again.
Critics blame bank-backed reforms for encouraging
Uganda and other countries to rely on export-led agricultural
growth.
Manuel embraced fiscal austerity as the way to pull
South Africa out of
its 1 percent annual growth in the 1980s.
South Africa cut its budget deficit to 1.4 percent
of GDP in 2001 from more than 6 percent in 1996, when
it introduced a new economic policy, written with
the help of World Bank advisers.
It cut inflation to an annual 1.7 percent in 1999
from as much as 16.6 percent in 1991.
The plan was supposed to help boost economic growth
to 6 percent a year by 2000 and create 126 000 jobs
in its first year, rising to 400 000 a year by 2000.
Instead growth slowed after 1996, averaging 1.3 percent
a year for the decade.
South Africa shed 126,000 jobs in 1996. Last year
another million people were added to the unemployment
line, while the economy grew 2.2 percent.
"We have undertaken a policy of very substantial
macroeconomic reform," Manuel says. "But
the rewards are few."
April 29, 2002.
[Source: April, 25, 2002 www.gpn.org]
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