The Civil Engineering Contractor April 2018 | Page 3
COMMENT
A new yawn … erm, dawn?
U
"As some of our projects
are taking time to get
off the ground and to
enhance our efforts, I will
assemble a team to speed
up implementation of new
projects, particularly water
projects, health facilities,
and road maintenance."
– Cyril Ramaphosa
is encouraging, he notes that it would
possibly be better served if maintenance of
existing water and health facilities could be
included here?
According to the CEO of Consulting
Engineers South Africa (CESA), Chris
Campbell, the body is encouraged by
the impassioned call from President
Ramaphosa for commitment to ethical
behaviour and ethical leadership. In
addition, CESA welcomes the intervention
to decisively stabilise and revitalise state
owned enterprises (SOEs) as well as those
implicated in State Capture.
I think he speaks for all of us here.
There is no doubt that investor and
business confidence have improved by leaps
and bounds since Ramaphosa was first
elected ANC president and then president
of the Republic. He has come over as a
thoughtful, thinking man who measures his
words, deliberates before taking action, and
balances the deathly tightrope walk between
diplomacy and offence.
Ramaphosa’s SONA speech ended with
an emotive note, in which he pledged
to bring change in South Africa, quoting late
music icon Hugh Masekela’s “Thuma Mina”
(Send Me): “I wanna be there when the
people start to turn it around.”
Indeed, so do we all, Mr President, so do
we all. nn
Kim Kemp - editor
[email protected]
nder the bleedership of Jacob
Zuma, South Africa has come as
close to utter collapse as any African
country could come, teetering on the brink
of being yet another failed African nation.
Hanging on to the last vestiges of what
could vaguely be termed an economy, a
country whose lifeblood was drained by a
vampiric collusion between state and the
Guptas, South Africa has barely had a pulse
these past few years. The economy has
nosedived and, caught in the slipstream, the
currency went into a tailspin as investors
leapt off the sinking ship and the private
sector refused to part with its money. By
the time Cyril Ramaphosa was elected
ANC president in December last year, our
currency had slumped to R14.14 to the
US dollar.
However, even before he was crowned the
winner, expectations that he would win the
race pushed the rand to 12.52 per dollar, its
firmest level since 27 March 2017 and now,
at the time of writing (early March), it is
sitting at R11.55 per one US dollar.
Is this U-turn all we hoped for or, as some
cynic stated: “Same bus, different driver”?
In his SONA address, President Ramaphosa
stated that infrastructure investment is key
to grow the economy, create jobs, empower
small businesses, and provide services to
South Africans — drawing accolades from
the infra sector.
The South African Institution of Civil
Engineering (SAICE), for instance,
applauded and welcomed his inaugural
address as, according to the institution,
the president appears to understand the
importance of infrastructure and the role
that civil engineering and construction play
in advancing socio-economic growth in
South Africa.
To quote directly from the President’s
address: “As some of our projects are taking
time to get off the ground and to enhance
our efforts, I will assemble a team to
speed up implementation of new projects,
particularly water projects, health facilities,
and road maintenance. We have learnt some
valuable lessons from our experience in
building all the new infrastructure, which
will inform our way ahead.”
Manglin Pillay, CEO of SAICE, points
out, however, that while the establishment
of an infrastructure investment team
Jazz legend Hugh Masekela’s “Thuma Mina”
(Send Me) song inspired new SA president,
Cyril Ramaphosa, to encourage South Africans
to be part of change in the country.
CEC April 2018 - 1