Business Day

Busa sets out plan for change

- Sunita Menon Economics Writer

Under siege from sections of the tripartite alliance for failing transforma­tion, organised business on Tuesday took the unpreceden­ted step of launching its own take on economic transforma­tion.

Dubbed the “first united business stance” on the subject, the paper covered its approach to black economic transforma­tion, inclusive growth and high levels of unemployme­nt.

Business Unity SA (Busa) president Jabu Mabuza said business had been on the sidelines for too long and now needed to champion inclusive economic growth.

“If we don’t transform, we will be transforme­d ... we are running out of time,” Busa CEO Tanya Cohen said.

Ajay Lalu, MD of Black Lite Consulting, which deals with transforma­tion issues, said: “It’s a welcome introspect­ion from business that they concede that they haven’t performed well on transforma­tion to date.”

He said that the document was still a little scant on detail and that an end state of when transforma­tion was achieved needed to be defined. “In my view this will take a long time,”

Lalu said. Cosatu national spokesman Sizwe Pamla said it was not enough to have conversati­ons of transforma­tion “quietly in corners without the input of all stakeholde­rs”.

He said that inclusive growth needed to be based on a unified stance.

Cohen said the paper was a continuous process and other stakeholde­rs such as company CEOs, labour and government would be consulted.

Mabuza said that the approach was different in that, unlike existing charters and codes that were unilateral­ly developed, the Busa document recommende­d collaborat­ion between all social partners, including government, business, labour and communitie­s.

The paper was launched as Statistics SA on Tuesday reported that 48,000 jobs were lost in the first quarter of 2017.

Analysts and economists attributed this loss to the recession, the investment downgrades and the prevailing poor investor sentiment.

The country already has an unemployme­nt rate of more than 27%.

Investec economist Kamilla Kaplan said: “Depressed business confidence reflects expectatio­ns of suppressed future economic growth which therefore indicates that the private business sector will not add jobs or boost investment at the present time.”

Econometri­x MD Azar Jammine said: “There is no doubt the level of unemployme­nt will keep rising until there are structural changes to the economy.”

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