Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Minister steps in on funding for importers

71 percent of Dhlomo’s stock made locally

- BIANCA CAPAZORIO

THE DEPARTMENT of Trade and Industry has learnt its lesson from the controvers­ial funding of businesswo­man Khanye Dhlomo’s upmarket boutique, and has issued a directive to stop the use of government funds for importing finished goods.

Luminance, the luxury Hyde Park boutique which sells high- end women’s clothing, homeware and gifts, found itself in the firing line when it was revealed that the company was set up using R34.1 million in funding from the National Empowermen­t Fund.

A total 71 percent of the store’s stock is locally made, but the rest comes from Italy.

Questions around the deal were originally raised by the portfolio committee, and yesterday, the fund’s chief executive, Philisiwe Mthethwa, presented the fund’s reasoning for rubber-stamping the deal.

Among these was that Dhlomo’s boutique would operate in a retail sector dominated by white- owned businesses, and which had been very slow to transform.

Mthethwa indicated that the fund had originally rejected a request for funding from Dhlomo’s Ndalo Luxury Ventures, but that a reworked deal which increased shareholdi­ng for rural women, required a financial contributi­on from the shareholde­rs and promoted skills transfer, was eventually agreed upon.

The business is now 100 percent owned by black women, and is also managed by women (81 percent are black). It has created 51 jobs, most being women and youth.

Additional­ly, local designers will be trained by “internatio­nal practition­ers” and rural women will be trained in craftmakin­g, investment and business management. The Johannesbu­rg factory making the local stock employs more than 100 women from Alexandra.

Mthethwa said the deal had met all seven of their codes of good practice.

She said Luminance was “just one store”, but that Ndalo had a long-term plan to open more stores.

Minister of Trade and Industry Rob Davies said the deal had been in line with the fund’s mandate, but had also shown up areas where the dti could “tweak” that mandate.

In this light he had issued a directive to all the dti’s agencies stating that “government funds may not be used to sup- port the importatio­n of finished goods and services”.

Government funds would also be prioritise­d to support productive sectors, including agricultur­e, mining, manufactur­ing and services such as tourism, and the creative industries.

The directive would have no impact on the Luminance deal, as it would only be implemente­d “going forwards”, Davies said.

In cases like the Luminance deal, where a portion of the goods were local and the rest imported, Davies said “we shouldn’t be putting our own money into importing”.

“But if it’s a very compelling case, we must be part of the decision,” he added.

Members of the committee said they were satisfied with the presentati­on. Committee chairwoman Joanmariae Fubbs said she was “heartened” that 71 percent of the stock was locally made.

Wilmot James, for the DA, said he hoped Luminance would be a case study of a successful business, studied in graduate business schools.

He later welcomed the move by Davies, but said there was “a clear public display of disapprova­l” over the transactio­n with Luminance, which was “owned by the wealthy Ms Khanyi Dhlomo”.

The ANC’s Bheki Radebe said he wanted it on record that he had been the one to raise the issue over the funding, and not the opposition.

 ??  ?? SONG AND DANCE: Pupils from Milnerton High School put the finishing touches to their act.
SONG AND DANCE: Pupils from Milnerton High School put the finishing touches to their act.
 ?? PICTURE: MATTHEWS BALOYI ?? CONTROVERS­IAL: Minister rules on Khanyi Dhlomo’s boutique.
PICTURE: MATTHEWS BALOYI CONTROVERS­IAL: Minister rules on Khanyi Dhlomo’s boutique.

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