Sakeliga bemoans the race-based ideology of the state
Sakeliga believes race-based ideology is being formalised in government at the expense of the public to service the narrow “sectional and elite interests” of the few.
Sakeliga believes race-based ideology is being formalised in government at the expense of the public to service the narrow “sectional and elite interests” of the few.
The last thing Dis-Chem CEO Ivan Saltzman needs is a maverick journalist like Simon Lincoln Reader putting his satirical oar into his empire’s suddenly turbulent waters.
BBBEE has been hijacked and repurposed by individuals and factions within the ruling ANC for the purpose of corruption and self-enrichment.
For true empowerment, South Africa needs to ditch race-based politics that serve simply to benefit an elite, writes Marius Roodt.
BBBEE has doubled the number of unemployed black South Africans from 5,7 million to 11,3 million during the past 14 years, says Steenhuisen.
NEASA chief executive Gerhard Papenfus joined BizNews to discuss how businesses (which NEASA represent) feel after SA’s month of shame.
Since the looting erupted, scenario planner Clem Sunter has increased the probability of the “Low Road” scenario for SA, in which the country descends into anarchy.
The NHI “fantasy can be sustained only by turning a blind eye to many inconvenient truths”, writes the IRR’s Head of Policy Research.
Sakeliga CEO Piet Le Roux explains why he says BEE is a failure and why his organisation is determined to fight unfair BEE practices.
A business organisation has succeeded in getting some BEE rules governing contracts with state entities declared invalid. ‘Doors that were shut have re-opened,’ says its CEO.