TOBAGGANING THE DOWNSLOPES OF INTERNATIONAL INDICATORS
Not since the days of John Vorster have liberal values been under such attack by government as they are now. On the ‘battlefield of ideas', the ANC has arrayed its forces against "neo-liberalism'; against "a weak and passive state"; and against "over-emphasis on individual rights (and) market fundamentalism." It has articulated its own position as ‘the developmental state, collective rights, values of caring and community solidarity, and non sexism'.
Blade Nzimande, the Secretary-General of the SACP, has been in the vanguard of recent sallies against liberalism. On 27 September he warned that "we have a huge liberal offensive against our democracy" and that "the print media is the biggest perpetrator of this liberal thinking." It was accordingly necessary to establish a Media Appeals Tribunal "to protect socialism" (NB. In saying this, the Minister admitted what critics of the MAT have averred all along - that its real purpose is political and not the protection of the rights and dignity of individuals as its promoters claim.)
Nzimande's attack on the liberal media followed attacks last year on universities in which he said that "we need to give higher education a revolutionary content, and not a liberal content." He also warned against "human rights fundamentalism" and said that it - together with academic freedom - were used by the ‘elite classes' to undermine the transformation of the higher education sector.
In its recently published ‘Growth Path to Full Employment' Cosatu castigates the ‘myths of neo-liberalism' which it identifies as ‘trade liberalisation, financial liberalisation, labour market deregulation, the limited role of the state, fiscal austerity, tight monetary policy and central bank independence'. It ascribes all the ills of the economy - and most notably catastrophic levels of unemployment - to neo-liberal policies which it claims have been implemented under the guise of the ANC's GEAR programme.
The assault on liberalism has measurable consequences. According to the latest ‘Economic Freedom of the World Report' South Africa has slumped from its position as 42nd freest economy in the world in 2000 to the 82nd position in 2008. This places it in the survey's second lowest quartile. Not only has the South African economy become less free in absolute terms, it has also been overtaken by a number of competitor countries that have embraced free markets and free institutions.