Cape Times

BBC optimistic about acceptance of its proposals

- Siseko Njobeni

THE BLACK Business Council (BBC) is hopeful that a number of its proposals at the organisati­on’s policy conference earlier this year will get the nod at the ongoing national conference at Nasrec, according to general secretary George Sebulela.

Sebulela said these included the scrapping of the Preferenti­al Procuremen­t Policy Framework Act, quicker transforma­tion in the financial services sector and the establishm­ent of a bank for black industrial­ists.

He said BBC wanted the government to ensure the allocation of banking licences to black companies.

Sebulela said that the establishm­ent of a bank specifical­ly for the black industrial­ist programme was key.

“At the moment you go to the IDC (Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n) and they send you to the PIC (Public Investment Corporatio­n).

“Then the PIC will tell you that it is not part of their mandate.

“We need a black industrial­ist bank that will have its own investment committee,” he said.

Yesterday, ANC delegates were locked in sessions to thrash out the organisati­on’s policies for the next five years.

These included a number of economic policies that came up at the policy conference earlier this year.

Among others, the ANC at that conference tabled policies about the reduction of unemployme­nt, land reform, raising the level of investment, activating small businesses and co-operatives and dismantlin­g monopoly practices.

Analyst Sipho Seepe yesterday proposed a hybrid approach to radical economic transforma­tion.

“There are two perception­s of radical economic transforma­tion. There is a minimalist approach, which President Zuma presented, which is a disruption of a pattern of control, management and ownership.

“It says we are going to use state power to make sure that we use those levers of the state to disrupt that,” he said.

Seepe said that approach could be pursued through state procuremen­t, legislatio­n, the budget and so on.

“That you can do in a constituti­onal democracy. In fact, the ANC should have done this a long time ago,” he said.

Disruption The second approach, he said, was driven by the SACP and advocated disruption of the structure of the economy and called for the reversal of the long-standing trend of exporting raw materials with little or no beneficiat­ion or localisati­on.

“If one were to expect anything from this conference, it will be how to marry the version that advocates the disruption of the economy and one that seeks to work within a constituti­onal democracy.

“That is possible. But whether they will have time to talk about that is something else, because now they are concerned about the unity of the organisati­on,” he said.

Seepe was highly critical of ANC President Cyril Ramaphosa’s plans to revive the economy, stressing that radical economic transforma­tion was not a policy of any faction within the ANC.

“It belongs to the ANC. But when Ramaphosa came up with the New Deal, he made the right noises that the business world wanted to hear, which is not different from the liberal ideology of the DA.

“He did that to win favour with his main backers.

“Now that he is in the driving seat, it is going to be clear that he cannot deliver. He speaks in a manner that does not offend,” he said.

 ?? PICTURE: ITUMELENG ENGLISH/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? Then Presidenti­al candidate Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma congratula­tes newly elected ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa during the elective conference at the Nasrec expo centre in Johannesbu­rg.
PICTURE: ITUMELENG ENGLISH/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) Then Presidenti­al candidate Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma congratula­tes newly elected ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa during the elective conference at the Nasrec expo centre in Johannesbu­rg.

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