JOHANNESBURG - In his recent reply to the debate on his state of the nation address President Jacob Zuma defended the right of Julius Malema to raise the issue of nationalisation. While making clear that this was not a policy of his government, he said he was not going to haul the ANCYL president into line.
He told the national assembly: "What members should do in an open democratic society is that if the president of the youth league, Julius Malema, raises an issue of nationalisation, they must raise their counterargument to him if they want to a debate on this. This must be done instead of saying to the government that they must stop him and make him keep quiet."
It is not difficult to rehearse the arguments as to why ‘nationalisation' would not be a particularly good thing for this country. There are no end of examples from the rest of Africa as to what the consequences are likely to be.
For example in 1973 Mobutu Sese Seko set about "returning" the wealth of Zaire "to the people", as Malema would like to do here, through a programme of "Zaireanisation." Michela Wrong writes that he decreed "that foreign-owned farms, plantations, commercial enterprises - mostly in the hands of Portuguese, Greek, Italian and Pakistani traders - should be turned over ‘to sons of the country'. This was followed by radicalisation, in which the largely Belgian-controlled industrial sector was confiscated."
"In theory, departing foreigners were to be compensated and the performance of new owners would be carefully monitored. In practice... no guidelines were drawn up to specify who got what. The result was an obscene scramble for freebies by the burgeoning Zairean elite. Thousands of businesses, totalling around $1 billion in value, were divided among top officials in the most comprehensive nationalisation seen in Africa."
"As expatriate managers headed for the airports, the new owners pocketed savings, sold herds, dumped equipment on local markets and ripped up bushes. The proceeds were spent on luxury items, with imports of Mercedes-Benz hitting an African record one year after Zaireanisation. Ordinary Zaireans, supposed beneficiaries of the process, watched in shock as businesses closed, prices rose, jobs were doled out by new bosses on purely nepotistic lines, and shelves emptied."