The critical success factor for sustainable economic development and transformation in any country is unencumbered free enterprise and fair competition.
It is not hearsay that the development of the South African economy continues to be arrested by past political and economic barriers to entry. Barriers that gave and continue to give unfair economic advantage to those enterprises established during the apartheid era. These enterprises have continued to become stronger, more established and therefore more formidable to challenge and compete against and are quick to counteract any possible opportunity space that may be created for blacks.
Many sectors of this economy continue to be dominated by white capital and organized cartels, not because they are smarter but merely because of the historical deliberate nullification of competition from blacks.
White companies and businesses that have emerged from the apartheid era enjoyed political protection and support from the exclusive business environment created by the architects of the past. It is an open secret that the apartheid government played a significant role in shaping the socio economic architecture of this economy. The role of politics is was to create economic advantage for those classified as white. In order to deactivate and transfer the unfair advantages of the past to blacks in general free enterprise cannot continue to exist until such time as the playing fields have been leveled through politics.
The march for economic freedom by the ANC Youth League should be seen in this context and, in my books, it is not a threat to the status quo but a platform from which we must see black entrepreneurs begin to gain emotional momentum to take control of this economy. Here I am not talking about black BEE opportunists but rather true entrepreneurs from our townships who need the very same support that the Van de Merwes enjoyed during apartheid.
Is there such thing as free enterprise? Can this economy develop transform and be inclusive without political intervention? My answer to the former question is that there is nothing that exists that can be labeled free enterprise, it is an oxymoron. My answer to the second question is that in any nation, developed or developing, it is the politics that shape the economics and never the other way round.