Underestimate the ruinous economic implications of state capture at your peril, says former Harvard professor Todd Buchholz. Buchholz, an adviser to US president George HW Bush in the late 1980s and early 1990s, was the keynote speaker at Allan Gray’s investment summit last week. On a whistlestop tour to SA, he jetted in and out of the country in a little over 24 hours. Speaking to the Financial Mail on the sidelines of the summit, Buchholz said it’s clear SA’s economy is facing heady challenges. Among the most ominous: an overly close relationship between politicians and private companies. "To the extent that SA is plagued with those closer relationships, which are a form of rent-seeking, it means the buying power of South Africans is diminished and the potential growth is diminished," he says. Competition suffers, innovation dries up, and ultimately, prices remain high.Buchholz cites specific examples of technology upstarts, such as Uber and Tesla, which have been challenged by ve...

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