Ramaphosa should appoint non-racialists to BEE panel – IRR
31 May 2022
The Institute of Race Relations (IRR) challenges President Cyril Ramaphosa to include an expert capable of analyzing the damage BEE is doing to poor South Africans when he appoints the new B-BBEE advisory council this week.
Said IRR Head of Campaigns Gabriel Crouse: “It is so obvious that BEE fails most black people, and poor black people especially, that nobody pretends the policy works overall. Instead, the President’s panel is likely to include several critics of BEE of the past who spin in furious circles only to propose that the solution is more BEE. The best would be no BEE. Let someone tell it straight from inside the new advisory council.”
The IRR believes the pro-poor, pro-merit case for finally liberating South Africa from race law would be welcomed by anyone seriously recognizing the harm BEE is doing to South Africans generally, making most black people poorer, and that doubling down on BEE will only make matters worse for the worst off.
According to Stats SA, in the first quarter of 2022 most working-age black South Africans could not find a job or had given up looking for work. This is a shocking contrast to the period between 2003 and 2008, before significant aspects of BEE were implemented, when employment figures among all groups, including black people, improved. Unemployment fell by 12% in that time.