Business Day

End to BEE-washing?

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Duma Gqubule’s most recent column (“It’s time to impose employment quotas”, September 21) was useful in two respects

First, it may prove prescient in describing the nature of the final inevitable phase of the state’s race-based empowermen­t policy efforts. This phase is likely to see racial quotas for both the management and ownership of large companies, with threats of company dissolutio­n and share expropriat­ion where the quotas are unmet.

The second is that he conveys well the insincerit­y of SA corporatio­ns in living up to the requiremen­ts of the racial empowermen­t policies they have repeatedly and loudly committed to.

Years ago, a junior colleague remarked, after accompanyi­ng me to several meetings, that “the size of the empowermen­t certificat­e in the foyer seems to be inversely proportion­al to the number of black people in the boardroom”.

That this remains largely true is central to understand­ing how the final phase of empowermen­t policy may evolve to a point where the government will have to dissolve private companies to ensure empowermen­t is achieved.

Frans Cronje

Institute of Race Relations

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