Business Day

Bill to benefit youth, women and black firms

• Public Procuremen­t Bill to pave the way for small firms to benefit from R600bn budget

- Khulekani Magubane Parliament­ary Writer magubanek@businessli­ve.co.za

The long-awaited Public Procuremen­t Bill will be submitted to the Cabinet in March, paving the way for black-, youth- and womenowned businesses to get larger stakes in state procuremen­t, which runs into billions.

The long-awaited Public Procuremen­t Bill will be submitted to the Cabinet in March, paving the way for black-, youth- and women-owned businesses to get larger stakes in state procuremen­t, which runs into billions of rand.

This initiative was announced by Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba during his budget speech on Wednesday.

In 2015-16, the government’s cumulative procuremen­t budget was projected at R600bn, and it was to be divided among more than 1,000 procuremen­t entities — from small municipali­ties and metros to national department­s and state-owned companies.

Taking a leaf out of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s maiden state of the nation address on Friday night, Gigaba said in delivering his maiden budget that the government would place emphasis on youth-owned enterprise­s, especially those owned by black people and women.

“Public procuremen­t ... is a critical lever to change the production and ownership of the economy to empower black people, women and the youth,” said the finance minister.

The government’s preferenti­al procuremen­t regulation­s, which came into effect in April 2017, included compulsory subcontrac­ting to designated groups on all projects and contracts worth R30m, as well as the designatio­n of sectors and industries for localised procuremen­t and job creation.

“Treasury will increase collaborat­ion with all law-enforcemen­t agencies to strengthen efforts to fight fraud, corruption and abuse of the supply chain management system across all spheres of government in order to restore the integrity of the system,” said Gigaba.

The government would also embark on a review of “evergreen contracts”, where larger companies got state business in perpetuity, in the process isolating smaller — mostly black, women and youth-owned businesses — from opportunit­ies.

“Evergreen contracts create barriers to entry, making it impossible for new entrants to participat­e in the allocation of government contracts.

“SMMEs [small enterprise­s] and black-owned companies find it very difficult to participat­e in procuremen­t opportunit­ies as a result,” lamented Gigaba.

“Next week, the directorge­neral of National Treasury will issue a directive to all government department­s and public institutio­ns, instructin­g them to pay suppliers on time, or ... [risk being] charged with financial misconduct,” Gigaba said.

Small business has long bemoaned late payments from the state, citing this as one of the leading causes of the high failure rate in the sector.

 ?? Kopano Tlape, GCIS ?? The money men: Treasury directorge­neral Dondo Mogajane, Deputy Finance Minister Siphiso Buthelezi and Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba arrive at Parliament on Wednesday. /
Kopano Tlape, GCIS The money men: Treasury directorge­neral Dondo Mogajane, Deputy Finance Minister Siphiso Buthelezi and Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba arrive at Parliament on Wednesday. /

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