The Star Early Edition

‘RACISM A RISK TO SA GROWTH’

- Franz Wild

STANDARD Bank Group joint chief executive Sim Tshabalala warned that persistent racial inequality and racism were a risk to South Africa’s stability and, ultimately, its economic growth.

The country’s competitiv­eness was “badly eroded by incomplete transforma­tion and by racism,” Tshabalala said in a message to staff at Africa’s largest bank by assets, published by the Johannesbu­rgbased Rand Daily Mail internet news site on Tuesday, the contents of which were confirmed by the lender.

Tshabalala’s comments come just over a week after Standard Bank suspended Chris Hart, an investment strategist, for tweeting that the victims of apartheid are ”increasing along with a sense of entitlemen­t and hatred towards minorities”.

The lender said the comments had “racist undertones” and Hart later apologised, saying that he didn’t intend to cause offence and that his tweet was meant to be read in the context of a slowing economy.

In recent weeks, there has also been a public outcry over a white woman describing black beach-goers on social media as monkeys, a white TV talent show judge got fired after saying the incident was a free-speech issue and a white TV presenter was suspended after ridiculing how a black government minister pronounced the word “epitome.”

A black provincial government employee was suspended for saying all whites were racists and “we should act as Hitler did to the Jews”.

Risk management

“What the last few days have taught us, I believe, is that we now need a new phase of open and serious dialogue about race and racism in South Africa,” Tshabalala said.

“Speaking as a banker, therefore, we need this dialogue because a large part of our business is risk management and because country risk directly affects the cost of capital.”

While South Africa’s black middle class has grown since the end of apartheid in 1994, blacks on average still earn six times less than whites, according to the statistics agency.

Government policies to promote blacks in Africa’s second-biggest economy have mostly helped a small group of people join the elite in one of the world’s most unequal countries.

“Transforma­tion is a commercial imperative for the group,” Tshabalala said.

“South Africa’s extremely high level of inequality creates grave risks to the quality of our politics, to the strength of our institutio­ns and to the stability of our society.” – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI ?? Standard Bank boss Sim Tshabalala.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI Standard Bank boss Sim Tshabalala.

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