Chapter 9
The Government's Macro-economic Policy
In a previous chapter, we refer to the view of Mr Meyer Khan in
which he expressed his disappointment that the increase in the
police budget was only 3,7% in monetary terms. There were many
others, Cabinet Ministers included, who also complained about the
cutting down of government expenditure.
I discussed the matter with Ms Gill Marcus, Deputy Governor of
the South African Reserve Bank, and she said that looking back
over
South Africa's development since 1994, there is no doubt that
our country has achieved a number of remarkable successes.
Economic policies had to address the consequences of decades of
apartheid discrimination, while at the same time meet the stringent
requirements of a rapidly changing world where globalisation was
the dominant trend.
While South Africa was emerging from its long period of isolation, it
emerged into a world that itself was undergoing rapid changes.
The information age and new technologies, deregulation and
liberalisation have all contributed to a world we hardly recognised.
The challenge for us was not just to catch up with the rest of the
world, but in fact to become part of a dynamic world in which
international principles and standards, codes of conduct, best
practice rules, corporate governance and so on, set the parameters
in which countries are judged as fit investment destinations or
trading partners.
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