There is no Crisis of Succession in Uganda

In January 2023, we shall commence online studies for the Mwangaza African Revolutionary Study Groups across the country. This December, we shall shed more light on how the online ideological studies shall be conducted. In the meantime, we have another 30 days for those who have not completed the registration of their Study Groups, with the Mwangaza Coordinating Secretariat at mwangaza73@gmail.com, to do so.

Today, we share excerpts from our October 2020 article, “There Is No Crisis of “Succession In Uganda”.

“In the false ‘succession’ debate … a number of ‘songs’ are mixed up: ‘Uganda has never witnessed a peaceful handover of power’; ‘Yoweri Museveni has stayed on for too long’; ‘the challenge is not succession, it is transition’; Etc. The newest is, ‘a new generation is ready to take over from the old generation – and solve all political and economic problems’ …

There are two major complications … First, there is a clear lack of understanding of the origins of norms and values in society. Our political class and intelligentsia erroneously believe that norms and values of ‘good governance’, arise from ‘good intentions’, ‘good will’, ‘good leaders’, etc. They have no appreciation whatsoever of ‘democracy’ as a historical and socio-economic category …

Second … the political class and intelligentsia fail to recognize the existence of objective imperatives for successful national economic management and transformation. They do not understand that the rigorous … implementation of those imperatives, is the anchor for democratic governance, national integration, as well as for the qualitative leap from backwardness to modernity …

… In 1960, American economist Walt Whitman Rostow, published, ‘The Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Communist Manifesto’. This … became an important model of economic growth. It can be a useful tool (alongside others) in evaluating our take-off to modernity and first world status – its limitations notwithstanding. Prof. Rostow posited that the more advanced countries have tended to pass through 5 stages to reach their current degree of economic development …

Traditional Society. This is an agricultural economy of mainly subsistence farming, little of which is traded. The size of the capital stock is limited and of low quality resulting in very low labour productivity and little surplus output left to sell in domestic and overseas markets.

Pre-conditions for Take-Off. Agriculture becomes more mechanized and more output is traded. Savings and investment grow although they are still a small percentage of national income (GDP). Some external funding is required – for example in the form of overseas aid or perhaps remittance incomes from migrant workers living overseas.

Take-Off. Manufacturing industry assumes greater importance, although the number of industries remains small. Political and social institutions start to develop – external finance may still be required. Savings and investment grow, perhaps to 15% of GDP. Agriculture assumes lesser importance in relative terms although the majority of people may remain employed in the farming sector. There is often a dual economy apparent with rising productivity and wealth in manufacturing and services contrasted with stubbornly low productivity and real incomes in rural agriculture.

Drive to Maturity. Industry becomes more diverse. Growth should spread to different parts of the country as the state of technology improves – the economy moves from being dependent on factor inputs for growth towards making better use of innovation to bring about increases in real per capita incomes.

Age of Mass Consumption. Output levels grow, enabling increased consumer expenditure. There is a shift towards tertiary sector activity and the growth is sustained by the expansion of a middle class of consumers.

Alongside Rostow, I … borrow from Karl Marx, in delineating objectively defining parameters of national economic management and socio-economic transformation – and suggest we read him together with Rostow.

In … ‘Capital: Critique of Political Economy’ or Das Kapital, Marx distinguishes between what he calls ‘simple reproduction’ in the economy on the one hand, and ‘expanded (or enlarged) reproduction’ in the economy, on the other. With simple reproduction, no economic growth occurs, while in the case of expanded reproduction, more is produced than is needed to maintain the economy at existent level, making economic growth possible.

This then, in Marxian terms, is the first strategic imperative in national economic management and transformation: saving (accumulation) plus re-investment in production (expanded reproduction), is a condition sine qua non for achieving sustained economic growth.

The second strategic imperative in national economic management and transformation is regards the division of the total product or all production of society into what Marx called ‘two great sections’ – the two departments of social production. These are the ‘means of production’ (Department I), and the ‘means of consumption’ (Department II).

While ‘means of production’ refers to commodities which are utilized in production or productive consumption, ‘means of consumption’ refers to commodities having a form in which they pass into the individual consumption of members of society.

The strategic imperative here is that, expanded or enlarged production aside, Department I (as described above), must produce means of production sufficient for its own needs, and at the same time produce means of production sufficient for the needs of Department II which deals with the production of means of consumption! In modern society, this is the condition sine qua non for the qualitative leap from backwardness to modernity and transformation!

Production in Department I is the production of: energy, infrastructure, heavy industry, metallurgy, machinery, machine tool production, electronics and cybernetics, chemical industry, etc. When this is combined with the all-round development of the human resource, the country is set for take-off.

In our enclave economy, a ‘succession debate’ where the strategic imperatives … are severely blurred, is an exercise in irrelevance. The philosophical roots of the false debate are to be found in our local pseudo-liberalist discourse …

To paraphrase: ‘with the collapse of the Soviet Union western liberalist values have triumphed – and humanity has reached the end point of … ideological evolution …’! This discourse serves to totally disorient our political class and intelligentsia, and to subvert the evolution of alternative national democratic trajectories …

… This is the context in which President Yoweri Museveni’s postulation on the Strategic Bottlenecks bedeviling our development, must be comprehended.”

K. David Mafabi
Senior Presidential Advisor/Special Duties
State House.

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