Proudly SA chief executive Eustace Mashimbye on a locally produced couch in his office in Rosebank, Johannesburg. Photo: Philippa Larkin

JOHANNESBURG – Last week, Finance Minister Tito Mboweni published his blueprint for economic transformation, inclusive growth and competitiveness – his vision to kickstart the South African economy in the short term and to ensure sustained growth in the long term.  

While it seems that it is neither a policy document nor a government paper, having been published without the inputs of the usual social partners of which Nedlac is comprised (labour, business and civil society), we as the country’s buy local advocacy campaign nevertheless would like our voices to be heard and will be making a submission and comments, as invited, by September 15. 

Should Mboweni’s draft strategy eventually be adopted, we want to have contributed.

Insofar as it drills down into some detail, with achievable goals, (provided there is united political will behind it) we support the minister’s strategy. Combined with Department of Trade and Industry (dti) Minister Ebrahim Patel’s own policy, which he outlined in his Budget speech in July, and which refers to the president’s re-imagined industrial strategy, we believe that South Africa will soon start to recover. 

Patel and Mboweni’s plans both speak about local procurement and reclaiming the domestic market space lost to imports.