Demand factors count and ignoring them will preclude growth

--:--
Following parliament’s standing committee on finance’s near rejection of the supplementary budget, finance minister Tito Mboweni wrote an oped extolling structural reforms as a cure for a moribund economy.

His argument centred on three inter-meshed but analytically distinct issues. He reasoned that, with the current high debt levels, SA cannot spend its way to growth as fiscal multipliers are low and that potential growth has been slowing from 4% (2009) to 1% (2019).

He went on to ascribe the above negative outcomes to structural constraints and unsustainably high government spending that led to high debt, which constrains growth. Structural reforms and fiscal consolidation, Mboweni warned, are the best way to achieve growth.

Disquietingly, economists have squabbled over the sizes of multipliers, a matter difficult to settle due to modelling differences, but have not faulted Mboweni’s core reasoning.

However, not only is Mboweni and the Treasury’s reasoning deeply erroneous, it is frozen in a corrupted conceptual structure that has successfully undermined economic enfranchisement of the majority. It also undermines growth, debt sustainability, employment creation and structural transformation. It is the source of the mess SA sits in.

Here is how their structural reforms faux pas is constructed: SA’s declining potential output growth is ascribed to falling total factor productivity (TFP). Potential output is the maximum level of output that can be achieved without triggering inflationary pressure, and TFP, the major constituent component of potential growth, is the efficiency with which factor inputs (factors of production) are utilised.

To raise potential growth — what the Treasury and the Reserve Bank aim to achieve — declining productivity must be arrested then raised. They see potential output, a critical construct in the design and management of macro-economic policies, as determined exclusively by supply forces (factor inputs and productivity), therefore, only supply measures (structural reforms) must be employed to raise potential growth.

According to their logic, demand or demand factors, no matter how strong, can only cause temporary deviations in potential output, so there is no need to use demand interventions. This seemingly well laid out mainstream argument is fatally flawed and lacks empirical confirmation.

As high merchants of myths, deaf and blind to macro-economic science, Mboweni and his ilk, whose ideological default mental setting is on structural reforms, deliberately ignore empirical evidence that unambiguously implicates the effects of demand and demand factors not just on production, but potential growth and productivity.

That financial crises ...
11 Sep 2020 8AM English South Africa Business News · News

Other recent episodes

Ford injects R5bn into production of hybrid-electric bakkies

Business Day editor-in-chief Alexander Parker speaks to Ford Africa president Neale Hill about the company's decision to spend R5.2bn to turn its SA subsidiary into the only global manufacturer of plug-in, hybrid-electric Ranger bakkies.
8 Nov 2023 9AM 13 min

Digital innovation no longer up in the clouds

The Covid-19 pandemic is the ultimate catalyst for digital transformation and will greatly accelerate several trends already well under way before the pandemic. According to research by Vodafone, 71% of firms have made at least one new technology investment in direct response to the pandemic. This shows that businesses are…
13 Sep 2020 4PM 6 min

Another farm invasion in Zimbabwe despite promises

Harare — A government official on Friday invaded a farm owned by a white commercial landowner in Zimbabwe in yet another twist that highlights the policy inconsistencies in Zimbabwe’s controversial land reform programme. The farm invasion comes just a few weeks after the government said it will allow some white…
13 Sep 2020 2PM 2 min

LETTER: Put Cyril Ramaphosa’s reform plans to the vote

SA is in a situation: the citizens and the president may be on the same page, but much of the governing party is on a different page, holding back necessary reform as a result. The last time we were in this situation, the president was FW de Klerk and the…
13 Sep 2020 1PM 1 min

LETTER: How will law treat gun-wielding shopper?

It will be interesting to see how the charge against the woman who pointed her gun at “protesting” EFF members is going to be handled. It has taken ages for the case against EFF leader Julius Malema to go anywhere. Irony of ironies, Malema was charged for committing a similar…
13 Sep 2020 1PM 1 min