OSF index reveals that SA's degree of openness has not progressed: Fiscal accountability doing particularly poorly
Twenty-two years after Nelson Mandela walked out of prison to realise his dream of an open and free society, and sixteen years after the sometimes fractious negotiations that gave rise to our Constitution, the Open Society Foundation for South Africa's (OSF-SA) latest monitoring index has found that little progress towards these ideals has been made.
This emerged from the results of the second round of Open Society Monitoring Index (OSMI) announced yesterday evening at the Women's Jail, Constitution Hill in Johannesburg.
The second OSMI, commissioned in April 2011, measures openness in South African society based on four broad dimensions: the Free Flow of Information; Inclusive, Accountable and Responsive Government Institutions; Fiscal Accountability; and the Rule of Law. Each dimension included several sub-dimensions.
As in the first round of OSMI conducted in 2010, not one of the four dimensions achieved a score above the midpoint (5.5 out of 10). Openness was most compromised with respect to "Fiscal Accountability", which was introduced as a fourth dimension in OSMI Round 2. This dimension earned an overall mean score of 3.8, compared to an average of 5.4 for "Accountable and Responsive Government", 4.7 for the "Rule of Law," and 4.6 for the "Free Flow of Information."
"Overall, these scores indicate that South Africa is not doing particularly well in any of these three dimensions, and is doing particularly poorly in the area of Fiscal Accountability," says Zohra Dawood, Executive Director of the Open Society Foundation for South Africa.