Stanley Uys has set the political scene for Zuma to consider his options (see here). George Palmer finds he only has one
The Zuma-led ANC alliance, now in power for six months, still has not enunciated a clearly different macro-economic policy for South Africa from the orthodox one followed by an otherwise discredited Mbeki regime.
Despite his long previous attachment to the SACP, Mbeki supported a broadly orthodox macro-economic approach, ably guided by Trevor Manuel at Finance and Tito Mbweni at the Reserve Bank: fiscal prudence; an inflation-targeting monetary policy; and GDP growth at a sustainable rate in a private-enterprise friendly environment.
In the global trade arena Mbeki favoured, with a few exceptions, continuation of a WTO-negotiated free-trade regime and the widely-supported scaling-down of trade barriers as part of a multilateral market-opening bargaining process.
By and large the corporate sector prospered under Mbeki & Co while Black entrepreneurs prospered mightily. Then in December 2007 at Polokwane came an epic struggle for ANC leadership. Mbeki was unseated by Jacob Zuma's supporters and was subsequently ejected from the presidency. Strongly backed by Cosatu and the SACP Zuma ascended to the presidency.
To ensure it won the general election by a wide margin the ANC promised a gullible --- and massively-unemployed electorate the earth.