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Ramaphosa’s economic plan faces backlash

by Admin
October 8, 2025
in News, Politics, World
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Ramaphosa’s economic plan faces backlash
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Published: October 8, 2025 3:07 pm
Author: RT

The South African president has announced a new ten-point list aimed at boosting economic growth and creating jobs

Partners in South Africa’s Government of National Unity (GNU) have rejected President Cyril Ramaphosa’s ten-point economic plan, accusing the African National Congress (ANC) leader of recycling old policies that previous governments failed to implement.

On Monday, while closing the ANC’s National Executive Committee meeting, Ramaphosa outlined what he described as a new 10-point plan, which he said would boost economic growth and create jobs. 

Among the president’s economic intervention was to use electricity tariffs and investment in the transmission of infrastructure to drive economic activity which would mean preferential electricity tariffs for ferrochrome, manganese and steel production. He said this would fast-track the Transmission Development Plan to install 14,500 kilometres of new transmission lines for the electricity grid.

The second intervention is to accelerate the recovery of the freight and logistics sector. This includes the implementation of Transnet’s recovery plan, private sector participation in rail and port operations, and upgrading of export corridors.

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President of South Africa Cyril Ramaphosa (L) speaks as US President Donald Trump listens during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House on May 21, 2025 in Washington, DC.
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The ANC’s main partner in the GNU, the Democratic Alliance (DA) said for the new economic plan to succeed, the ANC must drop Black Economic Empowerment and race based policies.

The party’s Head of Policy, Mat Cuthbert said much of the president’s new economic plan mirrors the DA’s plan to turbocharge the economy, which “identified roadblocks that need to be removed to build superhighways towards growth and jobs”. He accused the ANC of adding “its own failed ideas of BEE and race based policy to the DA’s plan announced last month”.

”While we agree with several of the reforms proposed by President Ramaphosa, such as private sector participation in electricity and logistics, professionalising the civil service, ringfencing revenue for reinvestment into critical network infrastructure, and expanding support for SMEs, we question his ANC ministers’ ability to implement these reforms at the required speed and depth,” said Cuthbert.

He said that the DA remained concerned at Ramaphosa’s continued defence of the “ANC’s failed BEE policy, which has deterred investment, stifled growth, and benefited ANC cadres at the expense of the vast majority of black South Africans who remain trapped in poverty and excluded from opportunity”.

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Alternatively,  Cuthbert said South Africa needs a genuine empowerment model that makes a tangible impact in poor communities and creates a pathway out of poverty and into prosperity.

”This is why the DA will shortly be introducing legislation into Parliament to do exactly that.

”The DA will lend our support to reforms aimed at turbocharging the economy, but will continue to oppose and change those policies which undermine growth and jobs,” said Cuthbert.

Mmusi Maimane, the leader of Build One South Africa (BOSA) movement, which is another GNU partner, also dismissed the new economic plan as an old song. He said what is critical is that the capability and competence of the state has been eroded by the ANC, “therefore regardless of the plan, the country’s economic growth is unachievable”. 

“The lack of accountability means this plan must have timelines that people can be held accountable for. The ANC has destroyed municipalities which are central hubs for economic growth, safety of citizens… the plan will suffer profoundly due to lack of municipal competence. Businesses and people work and live in a municipality, not nationally,” said Maimane.


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Economist Professor Bonke Dumisa cast doubt on the feasibility of the intervention. He also poured cold water on the new economic plan, arguing that since it had never materialised previously, he did not see what could make it work now.

He said the country has heard previously about investing in infrastructure and supporting small business, however, to date nothing has been achieved. ”I doubt that the plan will achieve anything. For me this plan is a tangent,” said Dumisa.

First published by IOL

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