Cape Times

Chief Justice slams business

Transforma­tion is too slow

- Siseko Njobeni

CHIEF Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng yesterday came down hard on business for lack of transforma­tion and fronting practices.

In an address at a conference to launch the King IV Report on Corporate Governance (King IV) in Johannesbu­rg, Mogoeng zoomed in on some of the shortcomin­gs of the business sector. These, he said, limited its ability to criticise the government.

Mogoeng’s comments come as South African business leaders are increasing­ly becoming assertive about current affairs in the country. Approximat­ely 81 chief executives of listed and unlisted companies recently pledged their support for Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan.

That was in response to the criminal charges against Gordhan which the National Prosecutin­g Authority has since dropped.

Disparitie­s

But Mogoeng yesterday reminded the business community of its own Achilles’ heel. He said companies should not ignore black and women employees. He questioned pay disparitie­s based on race and gender. “How can you justify paying someone more purely on the basis of colour and gender?” said Mogoeng.

He also urged the business community to deal with cartel conduct. He said collusion was shameful and tainted the image of business.

“It makes a mockery of the powerful principles that King IV comes up with. It is wrong and we should not tolerate it any longer. Expose the rotten apples to kill the perception that you are all involved,” Mogoeng said.

He said his comments were not meant to condemn business, but were a “brutal introspect­ion that we need”. The business sector was crucial in addressing unemployme­nt in the country. “If there is a sector that will take us out of that unfavourab­le situation, it is business. Let us clean up our act,” he said.

Mogoeng urged companies to confront fronting. According to the Department of Trade and Industry, fronting entails claims of compliance with the black economic empowermen­t policy based on misreprese­ntations of facts.

He moved to allay fears about stability in the country. He assured business that there was “absolutely no reason” to worry about the future of South Africa.

He said the country’s institutio­ns had demonstrat­ed ability and willingnes­s to uphold the constituti­on.

Does the business sector… have reason to doubt whether South Africa is a safe destinatio­n?

“Does the business sector… have reason to doubt whether South Africa is a safe destinatio­n? I think not, because of the supremacy of the constituti­on. Institutio­ns in South Africa are strong and whatever other institutio­n you might be having in mind now as not being strong, what is it that it can do that is contrary to what the constituti­on requires? Nobody can defy the prescript of the constituti­on and get away with it,” Mogoeng said.

In his address at the conference, president of the Institute of Directors in Southern Africa, Reuel Khoza, criticised

the practice of “cadre deployment”, which he said entailed the reservatio­n of jobs for politicall­y-connected individual­s. “Our government is replete with such people,” he said. Cadre deployment elevated mediocrity to the status of virtue,

Khoza said.

The Internatio­nal Integrated Reporting Council said yesterday that South Africa was the first country in the world to adopt integrated reporting as a mainstream component of corporate governance.

The council’s chief executive, Richard Howitt, said that South Africa had a unique history where inclusion and integratio­n were fundamenta­l to building the pillars of modern corporate governance.

“Increasing­ly, economies around the world are discoverin­g that a more inclusive approach, respecting the multiple resources that contribute towards value creation, is the best way to achieve resilient, long-term performanc­e,” Howitt said.

 ?? PHOTO: NICHOLAS RAMA ?? Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng says the shortcomin­gs of business limits its ability to criticise the government.
PHOTO: NICHOLAS RAMA Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng says the shortcomin­gs of business limits its ability to criticise the government.
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