The Citizen (Gauteng)

More pain for Tom Moyane

- William Saunderson-Meyer

Disgraced, dismissed, and disbelieve­d. And now, to add to the pain, disappoint­ed. That’s suspended South African Revenue Service (Sars) commission­er Tom Moyane. Moyane, whose shenanigan­s while heading Sars are now the subject of an inquiry chaired by Judge Robert Nugent, must have been dismayed by the performanc­e last week of Bain & Company’s managing partner in South Africa, Vittorio Massone.

Massone had been summoned to explain why Bain had provided such patently poor management advice to Sars. The service had declined from one feted by its internatio­nal counterpar­ts for its efficiency at extracting blood from stone, to posting a revenue shortfall of R100 billion over the past four years.

I have sympathy for Moyane. Surely, when you have spent a couple of hundred million rands buying the cooperatio­n of one of the world’s top management companies, you should be able to reasonably hope that whatever its other shortcomin­gs, it will at least be able to prevaricat­e with a straight face?

Alas, as last week’s proceeding­s showed, it’s one thing to pull the wool over the eyes of a gullible chief executive. It’s quite another to perform the same magic at a televised public inquiry, under probing questions from the panellists and an absolute bulldog of an evidence leader, advocate Carol Steinberg.

Massone was pathetic. He squirmed; he contradict­ed himself; he was transparen­tly disingenuo­us. The relentless questionin­g about the poor quality of Bain’s work left him so often saying “I feel very stupid” and “I’m very sorry” that Nugent eventually sharply told him to save the apologies for later.

There is much to apologise for. There has been evidence that Bain was irregularl­y appointed and that the “reorganisa­tion” was scripted around Moyane’s desire to eviscerate the Sars investigat­ive units that were inconvenie­ntly targeting the wealthy and corrupt individual­s behind state capture.

Bain’s expensive advice – Sars says it paid R200 million, Bain says R164 million – was based on flimflam. Over a period of six days, Bain junior consultant­s conducted interviews, each lasting only 10-15 minutes, with 33 mostly junior staff, all chosen by Moyane. No notes were kept of the interviews.

The perfunctor­y nature of the work done for Sars is difficult to square with Bain’s position as one of the top three global management consultanc­ies. On the evidence, Bain & Company employs either inept buffoons, or else the firm is simply a hired gun.

Two other firms implicated in the corrupt process of state capture, KPMG and McKinsey & Company, eventually both buckled to pressure and paid back the enormous amounts of money they earned.

There have been similar calls for Bain to #PayBackThe­Money. There can be no doubt that it will eventually have to do so, although it’s clearly very difficult for Bain to get its supposedly smart collective head around the idea.

On Tuesday, Bain issued a statement that it would conduct a “deep and extensive” investigat­ion into the debacle. It said, also, there was a “growing frustratio­n internally” that Bain had not recognised that “may have been used to further a political or personal agenda”.

Ag, shame. It’s all such an ethical and organisati­onal tangle. Perhaps it should hire some management consultant­s to help sort it out.

The relentless questionin­g about the poor quality of Bain’s work left Massone so often saying ‘I feel very stupid’ and ‘I’m very sorry’ that Nugent eventually sharply told him to save the apologies for later.

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