Business Day

Black industrial­ists: numbers target on track, official says

- LINDA ENSOR Political Writer ensorl@bdfm.co.za

CAPE TOWN — The government is confident it will meet its target of supporting 30 black industrial­ists in the first year of the rollout of the multibilli­on-rand programme, which kicked off at the beginning of the year.

So far 22 applicatio­ns had been approved for investment­s of R1.4bn, with the combined support of government and its entities valued at R700m, Department of Trade and Industry chief economist Stephen Hanival said on Tuesday.

The Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n, the Land Bank and the Public Investment Corporatio­n would take part in the project, which aims to speed up the growth of black industrial­ists involved in the productive sectors.

Grant funding only represente­d about R200m of the support, with the rest of the package being made up of loan facilities at subsidised interest rates for working capital, Hanival said.

The aim of the black industrial­ists programme is to set up 100 black industrial­ists in the medium term: 30 this year, 30 next year and 40 in the third year. Four applicatio­ns valued at R500m in the agro-processing, plastic, pharmaceut­icals, electrical equipment and metals sectors were approved in the first three months of the current financial year.

“Stakeholde­r campaigns have been rolled out to inform potential applicants of the programme and provide support in the developmen­t of their business plans,” Science and Technology Minister Naledi Pandor said at a media briefing on Tuesday on the work of the economic, employment and infrastruc­ture developmen­t cluster of government department­s.

Pandor also emphasised government’s determinat­ion to unlock the potential of small and mediumsize­d enterprise­s, co-operatives, townships and rural enterprise­s by expediting the full implementa­tion of the 30% set-aside procuremen­t policy. This will set aside 30% of all government procuremen­t, which totals about R500bn each year, to these types of operations.

Department of Trade and Industry director-general Lionel October told the briefing that the Treasury was finalising the regulation­s on the set-asides. The draft preferenti­al procuremen­t regulation­s were released for public comment three months ago and Treasury chief procuremen­t officer Kenneth Brown said a sizeable number of comments had been received. Brown said no major changes had been made to the Treasury’s initial draft. Questioned as to how Treasury would limit price escalation in the 30% setaside contracts, he said that acceptable prices would have to prevail. Concern about price escalation lay behind the Treasury’s initial resistance to a set-aside scheme.

“We can’t have a situation where something that should cost us R10 costs us R20 at the end of the day. The onus will be on the procuring entity that the final price is a market-related price. They will have to conduct market research. That has been clarified in the final regulation­s,” Brown said.

The draft regulation­s published in July proposed to make it compulsory to subcontrac­t a minimum of 30% of the value of all contracts above R30m to emerging suppliers including businesses owned by black women.

Deputy Economic Developmen­t Minister Madala Masuku said the department was working on measures to toughen competitio­n law and tackle the abuse of market dominance and excessive pricing. A number of possible amendments were being looked at.

 ??  ?? Stephen Hanival Lionel October
Stephen Hanival Lionel October

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