Can this be the turnaround the world has been waiting for?
As ratings downgrades loom Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan and bevies of businesspersons have been staging roadshows desperately trying to convince foreign investors that all is not lost with South Africa. They could have stayed at home. Jeff Radebe, minister of performance monitoring and evaluation, has everything in hand.
The Cabinet is aware of the risks of actions that "may deter potential investors who may want to do business in South Africa". Accordingly it instructed Mr Gordhan and two of his colleagues to have what Mr Radebe described as a "constructive engagement" with the banks that severed their relationships with Oakbay, one of the Gupta family's companies.
Obviously, one can't allow over-fastidious banks to undermine foreign investment in South Africa by getting rid of some of their clients. If any Gupta lookalikes want to set up shop in South Africa, President Jacob Zuma's cabinet will no doubt ensure that the banks roll out the red carpet for them as well.
Other "potential investors" should not be shy to seize this chance. Those who would like to buy farms should hotfoot it to Mr Radebe's door to point out that legislation in the pipeline to bar them from purchasing agricultural land is a deterrent to doing business in this country.
What's good for the Guptas is surely good for them as well. Mr Radebe could have a quiet word with the minister of rural development and land reform, who will surely not want to undermine his own government's new welcoming policy for foreign investors.