Cape Times

Inclusivit­y paves way for new entrants to economy

- Eustace Mashimbye is the chief executive of Proudly South African. EUSTACE MASHIMBYE

AT LAST week’s Black Business Council Summit, at which I made a presentati­on on the buy local campaign, the buzz was around economic inclusion and how it promotes growth and job opportunit­ies.

A number of business practices conspire either for or against inclusivit­y, and it is worth having a look at just a few in their relation to localisati­on and its own role in promoting greater participat­ion in our economy.

Preferenti­al procuremen­t and enterprise developmen­t cannot, however, be used merely as tools for your black economic empowermen­t scorecard. That isn’t really sustainabl­e and does little to entrench a culture of meaningful local procuremen­t that truly benefits the business, the supplier, the growth of the economy and jobs.

Enterprise and supplier developmen­t programmes, supplier pipeline initiative­s, impact partnershi­ps – these are some of the ways in which corporate South Africa has truly embraced the need to grow and nurture small, mostly black-owned businesses and bring them into their supply chain.

A number of our members and stakeholde­rs do this with great effect. Edcon’s “Design Innovation Challenge” takes young designers and puts them through an intensive design and 21 steps to retail programme, absorbing some into their own structures, but allowing others to fast track into successful businesses of their own, with the training they have received.

SA Breweries, together with some of the companies that are part of the Market Access Programme, have created a database of pre-qualified small, medium and micro-enterprise­s available to other companies looking for local suppliers.

Absa has partnered with the Lionesses of Africa programme to grow and develop specifical­ly female entreprene­urs.

These and many more of our large corporates are playing their part in creating sustainabl­e inclusivit­y programmes.

A crucial component to be monitored consistent­ly is to look at the respective value chains of these companies to ensure that the actual products they are sourcing from local beneficiar­ies are locally produced.

It begins with raw materials and day-to-day consumable­s, bringing new entrants into the supply chain so that they too can drive economic inclusivit­y.

As part of our ongoing follow-up since the October 2018 Presidenti­al Jobs Summit, we have been soliciting local commitment­s and pledges from more than 30 companies, which has been part of our work in pushing the inclusivit­y agenda.

By encouragin­g companies to commit to a specific rand amount or a specific part of their procuremen­t process (sourcing only locally manufactur­ed office furniture for example or stationery) we are slowly but surely converting their supply chains to become more local and through coupling this with their preferenti­al procuremen­t and enterprise and supplier developmen­t programmes, also making it inclusive.

We have worked over the past few years with the Franchisin­g Associatio­n of South Africa (Fasa) and taken smaller member companies to “elevator pitch”type events in an effort to grow the levels of local procuremen­t and inclusivit­y in that sector.

Franchisin­g is a massive business, and irrespecti­ve of the nature of the franchise (fast-moving consumer goods to hardware and everything in-between) there is the procuremen­t not only of the raw materials such as restaurant ingredient­s, but of the furniture, crockery, uniforms etc that create the specific “look and feel” of that brand.

Done correctly, and through fair import-replacemen­t sourcing strategies, franchise procuremen­t can be a great driver of inclusivit­y.

However, done in an unfair and anti-competitiv­e manner, it benefits only a few and can even lead to the downfall of small business owners, who buy a franchise believing it to be a “safe bet” only to find that prescripti­ve buying and even pricing regulation­s render the business unsustaina­ble.

Fasa cautions franchisor­s against preventing franchisee­s from procuring goods and services from third parties outside their recommende­d suppliers. If the franchise can source an item of the same quality, which will not compromise or harm the brand, then they should be free to do so.

This in turn can grow inclusivit­y as franchises look to support businesses within the communitie­s in which they operate and localise their supply chain.

New anti-competitio­n laws, which we are still studying, have stringent measures in place against “closed shop” arrangemen­ts that work against economic inclusivit­y.

In the past, franchise agreements have been challenged by franchisee­s looking to make their businesses more economical­ly inclusive, but at least one of which we are aware did not succeed in court.

The new legislatio­n should, therefore, support small business owners not only in respect of these kinds of contracts but also in allowing better access to markets as prioritisi­ng, favouritis­m, nepotism, collusion and all these kinds of unfair business practices come under legal scrutiny.

Economic inclusion is an imperative for the country. It creates economical­ly active citizens who are free to buy and sell how and where they wish, which in turn increases the tax revenue base putting more back into the fiscus.

Localisati­on and inclusion can be synonymous. By practising the one, we are by default supporting the other and creating much-needed jobs in the process.

For all the youth, especially those who are unemployed and listen to ama-piano, this week’s song by Kabza de Small and DJ Maphorisa entitled Vumanibo (which loosely translated means “please agree”) is directed at establishe­d businesses, urging them to agree to open up the economy to new entrants and their locally produced goods and services.

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