a focus on judging rather than solutions blurs both goals and metrics Today’s young people are programmed to judge. Many older people have been similarly reprogrammed. Going through life with a solution-focused mindset is radically different. Baby boomers grew up in a world where survival pressures had always caused societies to prioritise solutions. Then, with…Continue reading How judging undermines SA
Author: Shawn Hagedorn
Should we want an ANC-DA coalition?
Thirty years ago, the results of our first legitimate election seemed to maximise contentment. This year’s voting could be our last legitimate election and it’s hard to realistically envisage a favourable outcome. It is quite unlikely the ANC will be ‘electorally competitive’ in 2029 without aggressively undermining the basic requirements for achieving a valid election.…Continue reading Should we want an ANC-DA coalition?
Why it suits the ANC that the SA economy scorns global norms
Even if investment were to stream into the country, the jobless youth crisis would not be alleviated A recent analysis by German engineers outlined how Eskom’s dysfunctional management structures diverge sharply from international norms. Meanwhile, multitudes of well-supported accusations of incompetence and corruption distract us from unpacking why our political economy is a stark international…Continue reading Why it suits the ANC that the SA economy scorns global norms
How not to programme humans, Google versus Goodall
Great ape troops rarely exceed a few dozen before conflicts provoke departures. Humans are chatty great apes motivated to align broadly by security and economic benefits. As the Cold War ended, technological advances teamed with economic forces to deliver extraordinary global communication and supply chain networks. Poverty plunged far faster than was thought possible. However,…Continue reading How not to programme humans, Google versus Goodall
SA’s problems and solutions lie beyond identity politics
Poverty alleviation requires afflicted countries to add value to exports to wealthy countries, instead of prioritising inequality Grievances should constructively inform politics, as fresh options to better align interests flourish alongside today’s highly disruptive changes. Instead, grievances are routinely exploited to stoke political divisions. While oppression has always featured, our ancestors were threatened more by…Continue reading SA’s problems and solutions lie beyond identity politics
Job-creation realities
We can’t know how many of our unemployed young adults will be permanently marginalised – yet six out of ten of our 15 to 24-year-old jobseekers are routinely rejected. As it could dismantle a nation’s social cohesion, most governments would treat a youth unemployment crisis half as severe as ours as an existential emergency. Compare…Continue reading Job-creation realities
How will this era be graded?
We are conditioned to be scrutinised by people. Algorithms teaching themselves to second guess us will be an abrupt break with the past. AI has arrived just in time. This era will soon be harshly graded. Despite a concerted power play among elites at various western universities and news organisations to sabotage institutions and traditions…Continue reading How will this era be graded?
The ANC’s anti-jobs foreign policy
tweaking the nose of the West comes with costs While the ANC’s reliance on patronage greatly limits its institutional capacity and its ability to change, we mustn’t underestimate the party’s rising appetite for thwarting our constitutional protections. If 40% of voters favour the ANC in our 29 May contest, as suggested by various polls, is…Continue reading The ANC’s anti-jobs foreign policy
Trump’s potential to be a great president
Republican nominee’s personality is annoying but he could make world safer and more prosperous While neither Joe Biden nor Donald Trump would be an acceptable candidate to run a public company, Trump has much potential to be a transformational president – for better or worse. Let’s consider the upside. It would seem that Biden is…Continue reading Trump’s potential to be a great president
SA’s policy landscape a good place for faux PhDs to hide
The national dialogue sidesteps the truth that ANC policies sustain patronage and undermine job creation Those who want to pretend they have a doctorate should, like a certain high-profile director now under fire, choose international economics and work in SA. They’ll get away with it, because our policy debates take little notice of how the…Continue reading SA’s policy landscape a good place for faux PhDs to hide