outline challenges faced by manufacturing sector and the strategies to overcome those challenges as outlined in the fifth National Development Plan(NDP5)
The National Development Plan has become almost a symbol of faith for business leaders and business commentators. In what has become a knee-jerk reaction, they usually demand that the government "do it." In the same knee-jerk reaction, union activists, activists, and commentators on the left condemn the plan as a program to pacify business by sacrificing workers and the poor in the marketplace.
ANC alliance partners, the South African Trade Union Congress, and the South African Communist Party have accused Mbeki and Manuel of pacifying business. As Cosatu noted in a document published in late 2009, they believed that Manuel would use the National Planning Commission to impose a business-friendly approach to the government and the alliance.
They suspected, probably correctly, that the Mbeki government wanted the commission to become the center of state planning. After Mbeki was replaced by Jacob Zuma, they successfully mobilized against this, and as a result, it was agreed that the commission would simply provide support to the government and that the NDP would not be a detailed plan, but a broad vision of where the country would like to be at. The 2030 year. Thus, the National Development Plan is not a solid plan because it never was.
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