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President Ramaphosa to host President of the Government of the Kingdom of Spain on an Official Visit
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Members of the media are invited to apply for accreditation for the Official Visit by President Pedro Sánchez of the Government of the Kingdom of Spain to be held on 27 October 2022 in Pretoria. 

The Official Visit to South Africa will solidify the already strong relations between South Africa and Spain. This visit will highlight the existing cooperation between the two countries and consolidate concrete actions toward implementing existing agreements for the mutual benefit of the South African and Spanish people.

All media interested in covering the official visit are requested to submit the below details to Shadi Baloyi on 072 571 6415 or shadi@presidency.gov.za by Thursday, 20 October 2022. Deadline must be adhered to.

Full Names and Surname
Identity number/ passport number
Name of the media house
Designation/Role
Email address


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President - 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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President undertakes Northern Cape Imbizo and visit to Redstone Thermal Power Plant
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President Cyril Ramaphosa will on 20 and 21 October 2022 lead a District Development Model Presidential Imbizo in the Northern Cape province.
 
This 5th Presidential Imbizo will take place under the theme Leave No One Behind and will enable community members and stakeholder groups to interact with the President and leaders from all three spheres of government.
 
The community engagement will take place on Friday, 21 October 2022, at the Mxolisi Dicky Jacobs Stadium in Upington, where community members of surrounding district will be able to voice questions and proposals on how service delivery can be improved to better meet the needs of residents.

The Northern Cape DDM Presidential Imbizo will help to identify issues in the the ZF Mgcawu District that may hamper service delivery and economic opportunities. This consultative forum will also  showcase successful projects and allow government leaders to share information with residents.
 
The Imbizo will be preceded by the President’s visit to the Redstone Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) Thermal Plant in Postmasburg, on Thursday, 20 October 2022.
 
The project forms part of the South Africa’s Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Programme (REIPPP) which aims to bring additional megawatts onto the country’s electricity system through private sector investment in wind, biomass and small hydro, among others.

At a national level the REIPPP comprises of 92 projects across the country with a collective generation capacity of 6 296MW to which the Northern Cape’s contributes 3 563MW with 3 249MW already operational.
 
The Redstone CSP Plant makes up 100 MW of the remaining 314 MW that is under construction.
 
The plant was presented at the Sustainable Infrastructure Development Symposium South Africa (SIDSA) in 2020 and forms part of the gazetted Strategic Integrated Project (SIP 8) which deals with the escalation of regulatory approvals and the unblocking of development challenges in line with the Infrastructure Development Act 23 of 2014.
 
The President’s programme in the Northern Cape will be as follows:
Date: Thursday, 20 October 2022
Time: 11H00
Venue: Redstone ACWA Solar Thermal Power Plant, Postmasburg, Tsantasbane Municipality, Northern Cape
 
Date: Friday, 21 October 2022
Time: 10H00
Venue: Mxolisi Dicky Jacobs Stadium, Upington, Northern Cape
 
NB: Members of the media who have applied for accreditation to cover the forthcoming Presidential Imbizo are advised to collect accreditation as follows
Date: 18-20 October 2022
Time: 09H00-18H00
Venue: Tol Speelman Civic Centre, Upington
Contact : Morapedi Sekhoane on 078 944 0200


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President - 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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Briefing to the media hosted by Presidential Spokesperson
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Spokesperson to President Cyril Ramaphosa, Mr Vincent Magwenya, will this afternoon, 17 October 2022, host a media briefing at the Union Buildings in Pretoria.

The briefing will provide an update on the President’s public engagements programme for the week and address relevant topical issues of public and media interest.

Media is invited to the media briefing as follows:

Date: Monday, 17 October 2022
Time: 15h00 for 15h30
Venue: Room 159, Union Buildings, Pretoria

Media who wish to attend need to submit their details to Tsakane Khambane on 082 084 5566 / tsakane@presidency.gov.za by no later than 13:00 today, 17 October 2022.


Media enquires: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President on +27 82 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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South Africa and Saudi Arabia cements relations as President Ramaphosa concludes State Visit
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President Cyril Ramaphosa has today, Sunday 16 October 2022, concluded his State Visit to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia confident that both countries have cemented their continued bilateral cooperation and consolidated their strategic partnership.
 
President Ramaphosa visited the Kingdom at the invitation of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, His Royal Highness (HRH) King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud and was hosted in Jeddah by HRH Crown Prince and Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz al Saud on 15-16 October 2022.
 
President Ramaphosa has set a clear agenda of growing  economic ties with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the visit afforded him an opportunity to advance previous discussions on investment and collaboration in identified priority sectors, notably agriculture, defence, energy, and transport, with the Kingdom.
 
The President applauded the 17 Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) as testimony to the real success the two countries are seeking to achieve.
 
“Having started in 2018 with a commitment by Saudi Arabia to invest 10 billion dollars into the South African economy, in many ways was planting the seed and that seed has been germinating and thus far one billion dollars has been invested in South Africa through a company called ACWA Power”, said President Ramaphosa.
 
To this end, the two countries signed memoranda of understandings (MoUs) in various fields at a welcome ceremony held at the Saudi Arabia Royal Court in Jeddah.
 
President Ramaphosa and HRH Crown Prince and Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz al Saud witnessed the exchange of these MoUs between ministers in attendance of both countries.
 
The MoUs signed were in the fields of technical cooperation in agriculture, fisheries and aquaculture; in the study of the establishment of a Saudi-South Africa Joint Investment Fund and in cooperation in the promotion of direct investment
 
Other memoranda of understanding signed are on the establishment of a Joint business council, cooperation in the field of military industries and procurements and on geological survey cooperation.
 
The heads of State also witnessed the exchange of MoUs in the fields of arts and culture; health; social development; mutual recognition of certificates of seafarers; in information, communication and technology including in cooperation  between the economic cities and special zones authorities in the Kingdom and in South Africa.
 
While in Saudi Arabia, President Ramaphosa participated in and addressed the Saudi Arabia – South Africa Investment Forum.
 
In this regard, the President utilized the opportunity to invite Saudi Arabia businesses to the South Africa’s fifth investment conference he will be convening in 2023.
 
President Ramaphosa also led a South Africa investment roundtable discussion with key captains of industry from both countries.
 
President Ramaphosa concluded his visit by officially opening the Lulu Hypermarket South Africa Fest where over 500 South Africa products were on display demonstrating the improving trade relations between South Africa and Saudi Arabia.
 
President Ramaphosa was accompanied by Ministers Naledi Pandor of International Relations and Cooperation; Thoko Didiza of Agriculture, Rural Development and Land Reform; Ebrahim Patel of Trade, Industry and Competition; Gwede Mantashe of Mineral Resources and Energy, Fikile Mbalula of Transport and Thandi Modise of Defence & Military Veterans.
 
 
Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President - 082 835 6315
 
Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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President Ramaphosa arrives in Saudi Arabia on a State Visit
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His Excellency President Matamela Cyril Ramaphosa has today, Friday, 14 October 2022, arrived in Jeddah, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for a State Visit to take place on 15-16 October 2022.
 
President Ramaphosa’s visit is at the invitation of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, His Royal Highness (HRH) King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud and he will be hosted by HRH Crown Prince and Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Mohammad bin Salman bin Abdulaziz al Saud.
 
Diplomatic relations between South Africa and Saudi Arabia were formalised in 1994 with four South Africa’s democratically elected Presidents having visited the Kingdom to date.
 
The Republic of South Africa and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia enjoy a strategic bilateral partnership based on cordial and fraternal relations. 
 
The discussions would focus on export market opportunities for South African produce and on South Africa as an investment destination as well as an entry point into Southern Africa and beyond within the context of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
 
It is envisioned that the various deliberations will provide renewed impetus to strengthened economic cooperation in identified priority sectors, notably agriculture, defence, energy, and transport, further underpinned by regular high-level engagements between the two countries.
 
The recent 9th session of the South Africa-Saudi Arabia Joint Economic Council held from 3-4 October 2022 launched the South Africa-Saudi Arabia Joint Business Council.  
 
The Joint Business Council brings together leading business people from both countries to deepen economic ties as Saudi Arabia is the largest source of imports from the Middle East region. 
 
Total bilateral trade between South Africa and Saudi Arabia amounted to R66 billion in 2021.
 
President Ramaphosa will also participate in high-level business engagements with leading businesspersons as well as institutional and private investors.  In this regard, the President will deliver the closing remarks at the Saudi Arabia - South Africa Investment Forum and participate in Saudi Arabia – South Africa Investment Roundtable.
 
The high-level meetings will also afford the leaders an opportunity to discuss bilateral, continental and global issues, and to reaffirm their commitment to further cooperate closely on multilateral issues.
 
President Ramaphosa is accompanied by Ministers Naledi Pandor of International Relations and Cooperation; Thoko Didiza of Agriculture, Rural Development and Land Reform; Ebrahim Patel of Trade, Industry and Competition; Gwede Mantashe of Mineral Resources and Energy, Fikile Mbalula of Transport and Thandi Modise of Defence & Military Veterans.
 

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President - 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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President Ramaphosa appoints Mr Moepya as Chairperson of the IEC
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President Cyril Ramaphosa has in terms of Section 8 (1) of the Electoral Commission Act, 1996, appointed Mr Mosotho Simon Moepya as the Chairperson of the Electoral Commission of South Africa.
 
Mr Moepya has extensive knowledge and experience of the powers and functions of the Electoral Commission. 
 
He has served as a full-time member of the Electoral Commission since 2018 after holding  various senior positions in the Commission since 1998. 
 
The appointment of Mr Moepya as Chairperson of Electoral Commission is with effect from 15 October 2022.
 
President  Ramaphosa wishes Mr Moepya well in his new role. 
 
 
Media enquires: Mr Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President on  +27 82 835 6315
 
Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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President Ramaphosa to pay a State Visit to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on 15 – 16 October 2022
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His Excellency President Matamela Cyril Ramaphosa will tomorrow, Friday, 14 October 2022, depart South Africa for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for a State Visit to take place on 15-16 October 2022.

President Ramaphosa’s visit is at the invitation of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, His Royal Highness (HRH) King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud and he will be hosted by HRH Crown Prince and Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Mohammad bin Salman bin Abdulaziz al Saud.

Diplomatic relations between South Africa and Saudi Arabia were formalised in 1994 with four South Africa’s democratically elected Presidents having visited the Kingdom to date.

The late President Nelson Mandela visited the Kingdom in 1998; President Thabo Mbeki visited in 2007; President Jacob Zuma visited in 2016 and President Cyril Ramaphosa visited in 2018.

The Republic of South Africa and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia enjoy a strategic bilateral partnership based on cordial and fraternal relations. 

The discussions would focus on export market opportunities for South African produce and on South Africa as an investment destination as well as an entry point into Southern Africa and beyond within the context of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

It is envisioned that the various deliberations will provide renewed impetus to strengthened economic cooperation in identified priority sectors, notably agriculture, defence, energy, and transport, further underpinned by regular high-level engagements between the two countries.

The recent 9th session of the South Africa-Saudi Arabia Joint Economic Council held from 3-4 October 2022 launched the South Africa-Saudi Arabia Joint Business Council.  

The Joint Business Council brings together leading business people from both countries to deepen economic ties as Saudi Arabia is the largest source of imports from the Middle East region. 

Total bilateral trade between South Africa and Saudi Arabia amounted to R66 billion in 2021.

President Ramaphosa will also participate in high-level business engagements with leading businesspersons as well as institutional and private investors.  In this regard, the President will deliver the closing remarks at the Saudi Arabia - South Africa Investment Forum and participate in Saudi Arabia – South Africa Investment Roundtable.
 
The high-level meetings will also afford the leaders an opportunity to discuss bilateral, continental and global issues, and to reaffirm their commitment to further cooperate closely on multilateral issues.

President Ramaphosa will be accompanied by Ministers Naledi Pandor of International Relations and Cooperation; Thoko Didiza of Agriculture, Rural Development and Land Reform; Ebrahim Patel of Trade, Industry and Competition; Gwede Mantashe of Mineral Resources and Energy and Fikile Mbalula of Transport. 


Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President - 082 835 6315

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

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Statement by Minister Mondli Gungubele during the launch of Operation Vulindlela Progress Report for Q2 2022
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I would like to welcome you all to this briefing, which marks the release of the second progress report on Operation Vulindlela for this year.

This report demonstrates further progress in advancing the economic reform agenda which the President first outlined almost two years ago.

Since Operation Vulindlela was established, we have steadily addressed the binding constraints on growth and job creation that have held back our economy in the past.

We have long identified the key ingredients for higher growth in South Africa: a reliable electricity supply; an efficient freight rail system; cheaper data and better-quality telecommunications; a secure water supply; and skills to drive innovation and productivity.

If we get these five things right, we can place South Africa on a fundamentally different growth trajectory and create jobs. This is the premise of Operation Vulindlela, and the reason why the President has made structural reform our foremost priority.

In the first progress report, which we released three months ago, we highlighted several key achievements since Operation Vulindlela was established.

These included the completion of the spectrum auction, the raising of the licensing threshold for energy generation projects to 100 MW and the revival of the renewable energy procurement programme.

In the report that we are releasing today, we identify further milestones and outline the significant work that is underway in a number of reform areas.

The greatest focus during the past quarter has been on addressing the electricity crisis, culminating in the actions which the President announced on Monday last week. These actions build on the foundation that has already been laid in the energy sector over the past year.

Since the licensing threshold was raised, the pipeline of embedded generation projects has grown to more than 80 projects with a combined capacity of over 6000 MW.

The joint task team set up by Operation Vulindlela to support investments in new generation capacity has implemented several key changes, including designating these projects as Strategic Infrastructure Projects and streamlining regulatory requirements.
 
Through these efforts, the average time taken for registration of projects by Nersa has been reduced from as long as four months to just 19 days.

The time that it takes to obtain an environmental authorization has been reduced from close to 150 days, to just 57 days.

Additional capacity has been built in the Grid Access Unit within Eskom to expedite grid connection approvals and enable these projects to proceed as quickly as possible.

The actions announced by the President will significantly accelerate this progress.

As the various Ministers outlined this week, work has already begun to ensure that the energy action plan is swiftly and fully implemented.

The National Energy Crisis Committee has been established, and Operation Vulindlela is providing technical support to the committee together with the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy.

These reforms, including the removal of the licensing threshold for generation projects and the expedited procurement of new capacity from renewables, gas and battery storage, will supercharge our efforts to modernize and transform the electricity sector.

Most importantly, these changes will create the conditions for a boom in private fixed investment in the coming years, which will lift our economic growth overall. Construction of new energy projects and associated economic activity will create jobs, while increased energy security will encourage even further investment across the economy.

The progress report also points to a number of other achievements in the past quarter, which the Minister of Finance will elaborate on.

These are just a few examples of the impact that Operation Vulindlela is having as a whole- of-government approach, with multiple departments and entities working every day to ensure that reforms are implemented.

At the same time, the report reflects on the challenges that have been experienced with some reforms, such as with the delay in completing digital migration as a result of the Constitutional Court order. However, where such challenges are experienced, action is being taken to address and resolve them.

I will now invite my colleague, the Minister of Finance, to expand on a number of other reform areas and outline the way forward.

I thank you.

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Opening remarks at the media briefing by the National Energy Crisis Committee of Ministers
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Good afternoon Ministers and members of the media,

As you are all aware, President Cyril Ramaphosa addressed the nation on Monday 25 July 2022 where he announced an unprecedented set of interventions to end load shedding and achieve energy security. 

Load shedding is the single biggest constraint on South Africa’s economic growth. Government is taking bold steps both to address the immediate crisis and to make load shedding a thing of the past. Further, we are mobilising all of the resources at our disposal and will do whatever it takes to achieve energy security.  

I must emphasise that achieving energy security is our single most important objective as a country, to enable economic growth and job creation. Our short-term objective is to reduce the severity and frequency of load shedding through immediate measures to stabilize the energy system. Our long-term objective is to end load shedding altogether.

In this regard, Government will focus on: 
1. First, improving the performance of Eskom’s existing power stations; and 
2. Second, adding as much new generation capacity to the grid as possible, as quickly as possible. 
 
To this end, the President established the NECOM – a National Energy Crisis Committee – comprising all relevant government departments and Eskom, led by the Director-General in the Presidency, Ms Phindile Baleni. This structure reports to an Inter-Ministerial Committee, which will be chaired by the President and comprises the Minister in the Presidency, the Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy, the Minister of Public Enterprises, the Minister of Finance, the Minister of Forestry Fisheries and the Environment and the Minister of Trade Industry and Competition. 

Several actions have already been taken to address the shortfall in electricity supply, which is the main cause of load shedding. Some of these actions include: 
· Changes have been made to the Regulations on New Generation Capacity to allow Municipalities to procure power independently. As a result, several municipalities are in the process of procuring additional power.
· One of the first steps President Cyril Ramaphosa took was to revive the renewable energy procurement programme. This enabled 2205 MW from Bid Window 4 to proceed to construction, the majority of which has now been connected to the grid. 
· A further 6800 MW of solar PV and wind power is being procured in terms of the current Ministerial determination. This additional generation capacity will connect to the grid from late 2023. Another 3000 MW of gas and 513 of battery storage will be procured through the next bid windows. 
· In 2021, we raised the licensing threshold from 1MW to 100MW. This has resulted in  a pipeline of more than 80 confirmed private sector projects under development with a combined capacity of over 6000 MW, several of which will commence construction this year. 
· Eskom has established an independent transmission company and is on track to separate its generation and distribution businesses by the end of 2022.
 
These are just a few examples of the interventions government has already put in place. However, we recognize that we need to be responsive to the situation as it develops. The severe load shedding which we experienced last month showed that additional actions are necessary to restore system stability and increase generation capacity. 

Today, the Ministers will be unpacking these actions in more detail as well as outlining the next steps to ensure effective implementation. 

The plan announced by the President includes five interventions with specific actions and timeframes to address the electricity shortfall: 
1. Fix Eskom and improve the availability of existing supply
2. Enable and accelerate private investment in generation capacity
3. Accelerate procurement of new capacity from renewables, gas and battery storage
4. Unleash businesses and households to invest in rooftop solar
5. Fundamentally transform the electricity sector to achieve long-term energy security. 

The NECOM has already begun to meet regularly to ensure that these actions are implemented swiftly. Eight workstreams have been established to ensure coordination across government, and discussions are underway with the private sector and other social partners to ensure that the best available expertise in the country is brought into this effort.

As the President said in his address to the nation: “The crisis that we are facing requires that we should take bold, courageous and decisive action to close the electricity gap.”

That is our overriding objective as government.

I will now hand over to the Ministers to provide further details. 

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Address by Deputy President David Mabuza to the Informal Sector Symposium at Mpekweni Beach Resort, Port Alfred, Eastern Cape Province
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Programme Director,
Eastern Cape Premier Oscar Mabuyane,
Minister of Small Business Development, Ms Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams,
Deputy Ministers present,
MEC responsible for Finance, Economic Development Environmental Affairs and Tourism,
Mayors and District Mayors,
European Union Ambassador, Her Excellency Sandra Kramer,
Distinguished Guests!

BACKGROUND AND PROBLEM STATEMENT 

We are grateful for the opportunity to be part of this National Township, Rural, and Informal Economy Symposium, as a joint multiple-stakeholder initiative aimed at elevating the Informal, Social, and Solidarity economies by drawing insights from international best practices in order to inform our national policy options. 

Given the limited time and the lengthy programme ahead of you, we wish to begin by reasserting the national problem statement that your symposium will have to grapple with and hopefully bring some solutions to.

As the global economy slowly recovers from an unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic, communities around the world are counting the extent of the social, economic, and infrastructural devastation that has been left behind.

One of the many steps the government had to take to stop the virus from spreading and slow the rate at which new infections were happening was to put a lockdown on the whole country. This affected both the economy and jobs.

Contrary to initial estimates, the pandemic has not been the great equalizer. Although we are faced with the same virus, its impact has particularly paralysed the livelihoods and wellbeing of those who were already on the margins of society.

The majority of those affected are primarily low-income households located in the outskirts of our cities, small towns, and rural villages, where the poor and marginalised are concentrated.

The decimation of the informal economy as a result of Covid-19 restrictions brought about misery for many of those who derive their incomes and sustainable livelihoods through active participation across key sectors of the informal economy. 

The UN General Secretary best described this reality when he said: 
 
"The pandemic has demonstrated the fragility of our world. It has laid bare risks we have ignored for decades: inadequate health systems; gaps in social protection; structural inequalities; environmental degradation; the climate crisis. The economic fallout of the pandemic is affecting those who work in the informal economy, small and medium-size businesses, and people with caring responsibilities, who are mainly women. We face the deepest global recession since World War II and the broadest collapse in incomes since 1870. One hundred million more people could be pushed into extreme poverty. We could see famines of historic proportions. COVID-19 has been likened to an X-Ray, revealing fractures in the fragile skeleton of the societies we have built."
 
Nevertheless, distinguished guests we are of the opinion that if it was not for organised business, labour, and community in their respective constituencies and working together at NEDLAC, we would have been in a worse position when it came to our response to the pandemic and the nationwide lockdown.

Quite frankly, as we grapple with the social, economic, and political afterlives of the pandemic, our democratic dispensation is at a crossroads.

When a stronger economy, improved wellbeing, and shared prosperity are held up as yardsticks to measure how far we have come, the results are clear to everyone.

Whereas the people remain resolute in fulfilling the promise of freedom and democracy that we shared and embraced in 1994, the hard truth we must face and confront is that we are not yet near where we should be.

Our labour market and industrial policy choices have not lived up to the expectations of the majority and international partners who supported our struggle for freedom, leaving us with an unhealthy concentration of income, wealth, power, and opportunities in the hands of the already privileged.

Adversely, this results in a steady rise in chronic levels of basic social and economic insecurity for those already on the margins of our society, most of whom survive through the informal economy and are cut off from global value chains of mainstream economic activities.

Nearly three decades into our democratic dispensation, more than half of our population lives in poverty, and despite visible progress made, we remain one of the most dangerously unequal societies in the world.

Using information obtained from tax data, researchers Dieter von Fintel and Anna Orthofer revealed in the year 2020 that "one percent of the population of South Africa owns about fifty percent of all the country's wealth, and the top ten percent of the population owns more than ninety percent of the wealth collectively."

Beyond equal political rights, it can be said that our economy is fundamentally that "of the top 10 percent, by the top 10 percent, and for the top 10 percent."

Whichever way you look at it, this is an unhealthy and unsustainable state of affairs, which undermines our collective efforts as a democratic government, to build a socially cohesive society that is united in its pursuit of an inclusive, equitable, and better life for all.

We are thus hoping that this symposium will narrow down the national problem statement and help to position the role of the informal sector and its inherent potential in restoring the livelihoods and dignity of the most vulnerable in society. This is the challenge that you as researchers, scholars, leaders, and community organisers need to live up to.

Moreover, all of our reconstruction and recovery efforts will require that we as a nation remove the mask and get to terms with the true state of our nation. 

We should not be afraid of a real conversation about rebuilding that will lead to economic participation and growth for everyone.

We should be alive to the reality that the biggest risk to nation-building and social stability is the marginalisation and structural exclusion of many South Africans from meaningful economic participation and empowerment. If not proactively addressed, this has a potential to engender popular discontent that undermines our democratic dispensation.

It is critical that we pay particular attention to how, government at all levels can create an enabling policy and regulatory environment geared towards supporting the informal economy. 

At municipal level, our regulations of informal economy, at times are obstructionist.

Even though municipalities are in charge of trading rules, market rules, street trading bylaws, and beach bylaws in their own areas, it is important to make sure that these rules are always enforced with the utmost respect for everyone's dignity and human rights, including hawkers.

Our efforts to cut down on unnecessary paperwork and bureaucracy include the removal of burdensome regulations and arbitrary barriers to participation, such as those that make it difficult to get permits. 

We need to enhance the overall capacity of the state to fast-track applications and administrative approvals to regularise trade and economic activities of the informal sector. The informal sector needs to be supported by ensuring that registration and compliance processes are simplified to avoid unnecessary confrontations between informal traders and municipal authorities.

We need to improve access to modern technologies and platforms that enable informal traders to modernise their businesses in terms of sourcing goods, bulk buying, and conducting safe financial transactions.  

Integrated support in terms of funding and access to markets by small businesses in the informal sector remains critical to ensuring that this sector thrives to create and contribute to the GDP.


YOUTH UNEMPLOYMENT CRISIS

Distinguished Guests,

Our key measure of success in economic reconstruction and recovery will be our ability to respond decisively to the challenge of high youth unemployment. It has reached unacceptably high levels.

A lot of jobs in both the formal and informal sectors have been lost.

For instance, in the second quarter of this year, Statistics SA reported that 12.3 million people are jobless. Eight million people are still looking for jobs; 3.6 million are discouraged from looking for employment, while 700,000 have given up looking for other reasons.

The results continued to show that young people remain vulnerable in the labour market. In comparison to the first quarter of 2022, the overall number of young people between the ages of 15 and 34 who were without jobs rose by 2.0 percent, or 92,000, to 4.8 million in the second quarter of 2022.

In the second quarter of this year, the unemployment rate in the country was 33.9 percent, as reported by Statistics South Africa. This represents a decrease of 0.6 percent from the rate of 4.5 percent experienced in the first quarter.

Even though we are glad about the drop, it doesn't change the fact that the country has a big problem with unemployment, especially among young people.

To effectively assist young people, we need to realise the full potential of our rural and township economies. We need to focus most of our enablers and efforts to create jobs in the informal sector.

We need targeted support to youth owned businesses through the provision of mentorship, funding, key infrastructure and access to markets. Youth-owned businesses should be creators of entrepreneurship and jobs.

Your symposium should take this reality into account.

As the UN General Secretary emphasized, those who work in the informal economy, small and medium-sized businesses, and people with caring responsibilities, primarily women, have been disproportionately affected by the 2009 economic crisis and the subsequent pandemic.

What this means is that no economic stimulus package or recovery plan will take off until it is rooted in elevating the informal sector, SMMEs, and solidarity economics.

The critical measure of progress in this initiative shall be the material change in people’s income-earning ability and job- and wealth-creating potential.

As President Mandela stressed in his first State of the Nation Address:

“The government I have the honour to lead, and I dare say the masses who elected us to serve in this role, are inspired by the single vision of creating a people-centered society."


THE UNIQUE ROLE OF THE INFORMAL ECONOMY IN OUR RECOVERY AND RECONSTRUCTION EFFORTS 

Distinguished Guests,

Our country has always cared about the informal sector and the important role of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMMES) in fighting poverty and reducing social and economic gaps.

Our 1995 White Paper on National Strategy for the Development and Promotion of Small Business, asserts that:

"With millions of South Africans unemployed and underemployed, the government has no option but to give its full attention to the task of job creation and generating sustainable and equitable growth. SMMEs are an important way for our country to deal with problems like creating jobs, growing the economy, and making sure everyone gets a fair shot.”

These words were the first time that South Africa after apartheid started to understand how important SMME development was for economic growth, job creation, and getting rid of poverty.

Indeed, our National Development Plan, Vision 2030, sets out a target of creating 11 million jobs by 2030, of which 90 percent are expected to come from SMMEs. As ambitious as these goals may sound, they will only be reached if this symposium benchmarks the best ways to do things. This is because the economy is uncertain and unstable right now.

Even though we have been supporting the informal economy for a long time, the high failure rate among small and informal businesses continues to slow growth and hurt their chances of creating jobs.

We need more evidence-based research looking into ways to reduce this mortality rate of SMMEs so that we can save existing jobs and improve the prospects of creating new jobs.

One such issue is Rural to Urban Migration and the need for long-term planning. 

This symposium must address the seemingly unstoppable force of rural-to-urban migration and its implications for city-level and small-town economies.

Sustaining livelihoods across social strata in general, and low-income households in particular, has been and continues to be greatly influenced by the phenomena of urbanisation, the mass movement of populations from rural to urban settings, and the consequent physical and societal changes to such urban settings.

The force of urbanisation and its key drivers, continue to shape both human and non-human activity in ways that can neither be avoided nor slowed down.

The odds of achieving the provision of liveable, safe, resource-efficient, just, equitable, and socially inclusive human settlements to low-income communities are thus inextricably linked to the ability of cities to anticipate, manage, and respond to urbanisation trends, challenges, and opportunities.

By 2008, the proportion of the global population living in urban areas had overtaken that in rural communities. Today, more than 4 billion people, well over half of the world’s population, live in towns and cities.

The UN’s World Urbanisation Prospects Report, forecasts this trend to reach 68 percent (over two thirds) of the global population by 2050.

Emerging economies such as ours are projected to experience the highest and most rapid rates of urbanisation in the coming decades. The United Nations thinks that by 2050, Africa and Asia will be home to more than 90 percent of the world's urban population.

As massive sites of production, consumption, and industrial activity, our city economies remain the most influential factors in urban change.

In our country, 63 percent of the population already lives in urban areas. This figure is expected to rise to 71 percent by 2030 and 80 percent by 2050. Put another way, by 2050, 8 in 10 South Africans will be living in urban areas.

For as long as our cities continue to be "migration magnets," this symposium must grapple with the planning and development implications of this reality.

Although the reasons for an influx of in-migration to these cities vary, the pursuit of employment and related economic opportunities and amenities are well-established drivers.

Given that 63 percent of the population lives in urban areas, to talk about poverty in South Africa is to fundamentally refer to urban poverty and its relationship to the rural poor, who are already projected to be on their way to the city in search of a better life, opportunities, and amenities.

From a scenario planning point of view, the key questions for the Symposium are:

-    What infrastructure planning and provision should anticipate the growth of the informal economy as a key area of economic participation?
-    What financial support instruments should be designed and implemented to meaningfully support the informal economy?
-    How will we ensure that small businesses and informal traders can source goods and services cost-effectively as part of leveraging economies of scale?
-    What enabling bye-laws and regulations will be required to enable the success and growth of the informal economy as a driver of jobs and sustainable livelihoods?

These are some of critical questions that Symposium must reflect on to shape a new path for the support of our informal economy.

I wish to leave you with these provocations, and allow you space to imagine a more humane society in which the informal, social, and solidarity economies take centre stage in aiding our war on poverty, inequity, and unemployment.

As we have said many times before, the government is not the only one responsible for the National Development Plan or the plan for economic reconstruction and recovery.

For it to work, everyone involved needs to work together. The goal is to take strong steps to solve the social and economic problems caused by inequality and poverty.

Without resolving these socio-economic issues, the cornerstone of nation building will not be sustainable, and neither will social cohesion.

Thank you very much for the opportunity.

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 Union Building