THIS Lie Has Kept South Africa Poor For Over a Decade

In this video, we look at how former President Thabo Mbeki directly challenged one of the most damaging political claims in South Africa: the idea that the early democratic growth years were “jobless growth.” Tokyo Sexwale recently repeated this argument, but Mbeki, Dr John Endres, and Frans Cronje point to a very different story. From 1994 to around 2008, South Africa saw stronger economic growth, major job creation, improved service delivery, expanding access to electricity, water, housing and infrastructure, and a rising sense that ordinary people could make progress. Then, after 2008, the country moved into a very different period: weak growth, rising debt, fewer jobs, failing services, and growing political uncertainty. This is not just a debate about numbers. It is a debate about worldview. For years, the anti-growth argument has taught South Africans to be suspicious of wealth creation, business, investment, markets and productivity. But when growth is attacked, jobs suffer. When jobs suffer, families suffer. And when families suffer, the whole country becomes unstable. In this video, I show why the “jobless growth” story was not only wrong, but deeply destructive — and why South Africa must recover a pro-growth, pro-work, pro-prosperity vision if ordinary people are going to rise. South Africa will prosper. ******************************** Once-Off Donation to the Prosperity Catalyst Fund The Prosperity Catalyst seeks R2,427,259.37 to educate 1,000,000 young South Africans through free book distribution. This initiative will inspire prosperity and reject the ideologies of envy, hatred, and victimhood. Any donation, big or small, creates lasting change. https://paystack.com/pay/wugwetf4kz Bonsai Communications & Business Affairs ABSA: 9302111815 Branch Code: 632005 Swift: ABSAZAJJ FREE Download of The Soft Life (3 Secrets Comrades Don't Want You to Know) https://www.bonsaigroup.co.za/the-sof...