Johannesburg - A major conference by the ANC last week was
billed as the final nail in the coffin for a drive to nationalise the country's
mines. Instead, the policy corpse appears to be alive and kicking.
While "blanket nationalisation" - a sweeping
buyout that would cost the state, by its own reckoning, $132bn, or nearly an
entire annual budget - and a windfall tax appear to be off the table, the
week-long ANC talk-fest has left almost everything else up in the air.
Amid confusion about reports of more state mining firms,
partial nationalisation and "strategic" minerals, Enoch Godongwana,
the head of the ANC's economic transformation committee, took to the airwaves
on Thursday to offer some clarity.
It didn't help.
"I do not know what kind of clarity people want,"
Godongwana, a big-hitter in ANC policy circles, told Talk Radio 702, adding
that nationalisation "remains as a weapon for the ANC, as a tool, an instrument,
as an option".
It was a far cry from Mines Minister Susan Shabangu telling
an audience at a Johannesburg business school last month the issue would be
"laid to rest" at the former liberation movement's five-yearly policy
review.
Since the meeting concluded on Friday, various ANC factions
have come out to claim victory in their fight to screw more rent out of the mines,
the economic backbone of the white-minority apartheid state that ended in 1994,
and no friend of South Africa's overwhelming black majority.
Business Day reported on Thursday that delegates from six of
South Africa's nine provinces pushed for mines and firms in the steel and
energy sectors to be taken over - to the delight of the ANC Youth League, the
most vocal proponent of the idea.
The conference also endorsed the idea of "strategic
nationalisation" if backed by the "balance of evidence" -
whatever that may mean.
Deliberate confusion?
Predictably, business leaders are bemoaning the lack of
clarity and blaming below-the-surface power struggles ahead of another ANC
conference at the end of the year to anoint a head - in all likelihood the
incumbent, President Jacob Zuma.
"We have already indicated our discomfort," said
Sandile Zungu, general secretary of the Black Business Council, an influential
lobby group.
"The ANC has to come out very clearly, unambiguously
and frankly, and say this is what the policy conference position was on nationalisation."
However, the possibility remains that keeping everybody
guessing - including ANC rank and file - is actually part of the plan for the
party's top brass as it moves towards the December internal vote and a general
election in 2014.
"In terms of the definition, we don't want to have a
situation where we announce up front what strategic minerals are because the
notion of strategic minerals is a dynamic one," Godongwana said,
suggesting the obfuscation is deliberate.
Last week's conference is also not the first time the party
has chewed over the issue ad nauseam - to the concern of mining investors - and
then done precisely nothing.
Two years ago, at a policy conference in Durban, it was
looking at "strategic sectors" for nationalisation. Three years
before that, it had its eye on "strategic assets".
"It's pure populist rhetoric," said Peter Major, a
mining analyst at Cadiz Corporate Solutions in Cape Town.
"They'll study it to death until the election comes, but they never really implement anything they say. They're not going to say anything to lose votes, but they're also not going to do anything to lose money."