DA leader John Steenhuisen said the party welcomes 100 days since the formation of the Government of National Unity (GNU).
Steenhuisen said that by entering the GNU, the DA has generated enormous optimism for a better future, and injected new confidence into the country’s economic prospects.
“In the 100 days since the election, the DA has begun to turn that optimism into action. Our first decision was to prioritise economic growth and job creation above all else. The single most important outcomes for the GNU are higher levels of growth and lower unemployment. Those are the KPIs that the DA is focused on.”
Steenhuisen added that they are viewing every department in which the DA is represented as an opportunity to drive growth and jobs, and to develop policy priorities accordingly.
“This can be seen in some of the work already done by DA ministers and deputy ministers, including promoting a comprehensive spending review to identify government programmes that don’t deliver value for the people of South Africa, with a view to eliminating them.
“We absolutely have to bring the debt-to-GDP ratio under 70% in the next five years in order to avoid a fiscal crisis. Faster growth is necessary, but so too is better prioritised spending.”
Steenhuisen said that they are working with Treasury and the Presidency to include in Operation Vulindlela the concession of ports, the concession of the rail management system, creating open access to rail, establishing a secondary market for broadband, reforming the local government financial model and reforming the financing of local government infrastructure.
Steenhuisen added that they are developing the “Home Affairs @ home” vision for a digitally transformed department that delivers world-class services without requiring clients to visit Home Affairs offices and introduced a Trusted Tour Operator Scheme (TTOS) to unlock tourism from China and India.
Steenhuisen said that they have initiated a series of investigations into corruption in the Department of Public Works. “We have also initiated a review of the 30% local procurement rule for construction projects to ensure that it is not abused by criminal elements and that small businesses are truly empowered.
“We are also amending the KPIs of the Energy and Water Seta and the Fibre, Processing and Manufacturing Seta, to include the number of the learners that are absorbed into employment or enabled to become entrepreneurs.”
Steenhuisen said that they are initiating the first-ever comprehensive review of education financing and beginning the process of stabilising the funding for education over the medium term. “Within less than one month of identifying the issue, the Department of Home Affairs has managed to clear a backlog of almost 250 000 ID applications that had been accumulating for almost a year. We have also initiated a study into the economic impact of reducing VAT and import duties on smart devices to enable more South Africans to access 4 and 5G networks.”
The Mercury