Integration into the international financial network was reinforced
by
South Africa's participation in various international forums,
including bodies such as the World Trade Organisation, the
International Monetary and Fiscal Committee, the Group of 20, the
International Organisation of Securities Commissions (which
promotes the development of efficient securities and future
markets) and the Basel Committee Core Principles Liaison Group,
concerned with sound banking supervision.
Government initiatives to integrate South Africa into the
international financial markets focused on foreign investment and
the liberalisation of capital flows.
The challenges facing a new democratic government in 1994 were
daunting, and often under-estimated. The phenomenal
achievements are often not recognised because the magnitude of
the problem is not fully realised. Unravelling the apartheid state
infrastructure, including the bantustans, which were extensively
underpinned by an intricate legal spider's web, was a feat in itself.
But above all, the new government found economic chaos and
coffers that were virtually empty.
While we recognise that many challenges still face us, not least
among them tackling the high level of unemployment and attaining
higher rates of growth, even our sharpest critics will acknowledge
that an ANC government has put in place sound monetary and
fiscal policies, and that the economy is better managed than ever
before.
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