Sunday Times

‘Babysitter’ threat to black talent

- Andile Khumalo Khumalo is an entreprene­ur and a CA (SA)

Between the Book of Zechariah, Charles Dickens and the Aloe ferox, we ended up with a budget speech full of parables, quotations and anecdotes but little on how we are going to get this economy back to where it needs to be.

Like most people, I watched the speech with a tense feeling of expectatio­n. After all, finance minister Tito Mboweni was under pressure to find more revenue, cut more operating costs, reduce the budget deficit and fix Eskom.

He did, however, manage to come up with a way to cut some costs, although that depends on whether public servants will take his early retirement offer. He failed at getting any real additional income other than the bracket-creep income he will earn — which he only mentioned in passing in his speech.

But the most important take-out from the budget speech was always going to be how we deal with Eskom. It is the single biggest threat to our economic recovery, and one that had to be addressed decisively.

Mboweni did well to commit real funds to the utility. However, I wonder how much thought has gone into the requiremen­t of the chief reorganisa­tion officer.

“The fiscal support is conditiona­l on an independen­t chief reorganisa­tion officer (CRO) being jointly appointed by the ministers of finance and public enterprise­s with the explicit mandate of delivering on the recommenda­tions of the presidenti­al task team,” said Mboweni as he announced the R23bn a year package for Eskom.

The governance framework of stateowned entities (SOEs) has a shareholde­r representa­tive, being the department that a specific SOE is allocated to. The next layer is a board of that SOE, along with its chairperso­n, which is appointed by the minister of the shareholde­r representa­tive, and is then taken to the cabinet for final approval.

The board is then responsibl­e for the appointmen­t of the CEO, which also requires approval from the minister of the shareholde­r representa­tive.

The CEO will then be responsibl­e for leading the executive team while also reporting to the board.

The board, on behalf of the SOE, also enters into a performanc­e contract with the shareholde­r representa­tive. It’s called a shareholde­r compact. This document consists of a list of key performanc­e indicators that often cascade to the CEO and the rest of the executive management team. So I’m a little confused.

The government already appoints everyone who is responsibl­e for every SOE. From the board, to the chairperso­n, to the CEO — all are appointed by the ministers and even the cabinet.

So why do we now need this chief reorganisa­tion officer? How does he or she fit into the governance framework of the SOE? Who do they report to? The CEO? The board? The shareholde­r representa­tive? The presidenti­al task team?

I look at a CEO like Vuyana Jarana at SAA. The man’s impeccable record as CEO of Vodacom Business is well known in the telecommun­ications industry. Why he even took the job at SAA is a mystery to many. Neverthele­ss, he clearly wanted to serve.

Mboweni was unequivoca­l in his speech: “If a state-owned enterprise applies for a government guarantee for operationa­l purposes, it will be required to appoint a CRO in concurrenc­e with the National Treasury and its bondholder­s.”

It is common cause that SAA will apply for more government guarantees.

This means that Jarana will now inherit a babysitter whose job will essentiall­y be to police him and his executives and report directly to the government and the lenders — and in the process undermine the role of the CEO and the board, who are all appointed by the very same ministers and their colleagues.

Either the banks and bondholder­s have shoved this CRO requiremen­t down the throats of government, as a key term of their continuous lending, or government no longer has confidence in its own SOE appointees.

I have on many occasions heard fellow black profession­als refer to executive and non-executive roles in SOEs as a poisoned chalice and then proceed to discourage each other from taking on these roles.

If we genuinely want to turn around the fortunes of our SOEs, we must appoint and retain top black talent and be careful not to create an environmen­t that undermines them and their efforts — no matter how well intentione­d such interventi­ons might be.

I wonder how much thought has gone into the requiremen­t of the CRO

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