Hurry up and wait
You can almost bet on it. The minute there’s a rash of renaming some new government corruption scandal will come to light. So it came
Budget bottom line: SA is living on borrowed time
Finance Minister Tito Mboweni and the government he serves are increasingly living on borrowed time. In the absence of growth-enhancing policy reforms and fiscal prudence,
Water crisis is not looming, it’s here
Friends drove down to the Eastern Cape recently and travelled through some of its truly beautiful mountain passes. They noted that the commercial farms looked
The ANC could beat unemployment but won’t
In 1920, the Communist Government of the Soviet Union faced a terrible problem it knew exactly how to solve – but would not. After three
Hopelessness and hopefulness to be found in Cambodia – and parallels with SA
Book review: Cambodia: From Pol Pot to Hun Sen and Beyond Sebastian Strangio (2020) Cambodia is one of the most fascinating countries on Earth. It
Why we took the government to court over the lockdown
Democratic institutions are the backbone of any prosperous country. Strong democratic institutions are needed to protect civil rights and political freedoms; these in turn ensure
Alcohol ban the bluntest tool in fight against Covid-19
It has been a few weeks since South Africa’s latest ban on the sale of alcohol was lifted. While a relief for many large and
The aloe ferox is dead
What does it mean when ‘markets react positively’ to Wednesday’s budget speech? Why would they react positively, when it was laden with bad news? On
Land reform can promote agriculture – but what Ramaphosa’s government proposes cannot
There is no trade-off between land reform and agricultural production and productivity. This was the message from President Cyril Ramaphosa in the debate on the
This Week in History recalls memorable and decisive events and personalities of the past. 21st February 1808 – Without declaring war, Russian troops cross the Swedish