Time - USA (2021-07-19)

(Antfer) #1
23

LEADERSHIP BRIEF

The American


timber surge


When the British navy was
the most powerful military
force in the world, towering
straight trees suitable for
the masts of warships
were a prized strategic
resource from its colonies,
the rare earth resources
of their day. Nearly 250
years later, the U.S. is still
home to some of the most
valuable timber stands
in the world, and lumber
has been one of the most
in-demand commodities
this summer, as the
strongest housing market
in more than a decade has
caused its value to soar,
peaking in May. Although
lumber prices have fallen
recently, experts expect
prices to remain high
relative to historical levels.
Housing “demand is just off
the charts now,” says Devin
Stockfish, CEO of timber
company Weyerhaeuser.
“We have massively
underbuilt housing in
the U.S. The whole
supply chain broke down
coming out of the Great
Recession.” Stockfish
expects housing demand to
stay strong for some time
as the U.S. struggles to
overcome years of failing
to build enough new homes
to keep up with population
growth. —Eben Shapiro


Devin Stockfish, CEO of
Weyerhaeuser

In any country,
the central political
question is, What is
the role of the law?
Does it exist to protect
every individual from
abuses of power? Or
does it exist mainly to protect the power­
ful? A landmark court decision gives
many South Africans reassurance that
their governing institutions work. But it’s
not the end of the story.
On June 29, South Africa’s
Constitutional Court ruled that former
President Jacob Zuma must
serve 15 months in prison
for failing this year to
appear before a commission
investigating corruption
during his presidency
(2009–2018). Zuma not only
rejected the commission’s
authority and refused to
answer charges or mount a defense, but
he also wrote a 21­page letter to the Chief
Justice of the Constitutional Court that
charged that the corruption commission
was “established to destroy the work
that I did when I served my country as
President.”
He then essentially dared the court to
jail him: “My imprisonment [by the Con­
stitutional Court] would become the soil
on which future struggles for a judiciary
that sees itself as a servant of the Constitu­
tion and the people rather than an instru­
ment for advancing dominant political
narratives.” That sounded like a threat that
any judgment against him would trigger
social unrest.
The court ordered Zuma to surrender
to authorities. The former President has
launched an appeal to the same court and
so far refused to obey. Supporters have
surrounded his home and vow to protect
him. Authorities are bracing for protests
in other parts of the country. The justices
accuse Zuma of trying to “destroy the
rule of law.”
Zuma was once a hero of the struggle
against apartheid, and like Nelson Man­
dela, he was imprisoned for years on

Robben Island. But controversy has fol­
lowed Zuma throughout his political ca­
reer. In 2005, he was charged with ac­
cepting bribes as part of a large arms deal
while serving as South Africa’s Deputy
President in 1999. In response, then Pres­
ident Thabo Mbeki fired him. In 2006, he
was acquitted of raping a woman in a case
that revealed he had no idea how AIDS
was transmitted in a country battling an
HIV epidemic.
But despite all of this, Zuma, an un­
deniably charismatic politician, wrested
control of the African National Congress
(ANC) from former boss
Mbeki in 2007 and was elected
President in 2009. As Presi­
dent, he faced more charges
of corruption and abuse of
power. In 2016, South Africa’s
Constitutional Court ruled
that Zuma had illegally used
more than $15 million in pub­
lic funds on his private home. He drew rid­
icule after insisting that the addition of a
swimming pool was needed to protect the
house in case of fire.
After the ANC suffered losses in 2016,
it became clear that Zuma was losing po­
litical strength, and in 2018 he resigned
the presidency. He was replaced by Cyril
Ramaphosa.

Official cOrruptiOn has cost a great
deal over the years. Public money di­
verted to private use deprived South
Africa of the funding for infrastructure
needed to create jobs and spark growth
and for social safety net protections. It
also undermined the country’s reputa­
tion for governance and financial man­
agement needed to secure foreign invest­
ment. South Africa has scored poorly
in global corruption rankings for many
years. When Zuma stepped down, he
left a nation with high wage inequal­
ity, high unemployment and low global
competitiveness.
But the country’s Constitutional
Court has now shown that it will hold
even the country’s most powerful men
accountable. •

THE RISK REPORT

A South African court offers
hope for the rule of law
By Ian Bremmer

The justices
accuse Zuma
of trying to
‘destroy the
rule of law’
Free download pdf