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The revised codes are difficult, but what are they trying to achieve?You might have looked at the Revised Codes of Good Practice (RCoGP) through a business lens, and realised they were so difficult to score on, that they left you wondering what they were trying to achieve, and if this was a step in the right direction or just too large a chasm to leap. This article revisits the original intention of B-BBEE and describes how the changes in the RCoGP support the emergent transformation needs of South Africa today. Restating the original intentThe original objectives of B-BBEE, as stated by the Department of Trade and Industry (dti) Strategy Document (2003) were to create "an integrated and inherent socio-economic process, that directly contributes to the transformation of South Africa and brings about significant increases in the number of black people that manage, own and control the country's economy, as well as significant decreases in inequalities."1 This was formed from the late 1990s to 2003, while the country, at a socio-political level, was driven by a neoliberal model. There was an understanding that BBBEE was predominantly focused on building and strengthening a middle class, rather than being a grass-roots poverty alleviation and access mechanism. This can be seen in the relatively low weighting given to socio-economic development. It was tacitly understood that business would focus on the barriers to entry for those economic factors that were about to become active, thus stimulating quick growth and increasing the tax base, which the government could then use to enable those participants that were further away (in time and capacity) from becoming economically active. Times and circumstances change and the Codes of Good Practice (CoGP) now have a built-in process for updating best practice every five years to ensure a good fit with the emergent current reality. Reviewing the original intentWhile we have seen some significant development of a black middle class, the country has clearly emerged over the years since 2003 with fresh challenges. These can be best understood and seen through the lens of the nine critical success factors detailed in the National Development Plan (2011) (National Development Plan Vision 2030 -lo-res.pdf Download)
View the National Planning Commission Youtube channel for the NDP rationale. After reviewing behaviour against the first five-year round of the CoGP, as well as taking global best practice into account, such as Malaysia's experiences in the 80s (BBBEE a 5 year review), it was felt that the following principle changes were needed in the CoGP as encapsulated in the model below: The diagram above refers to five key principle changes reflected in the revised CoGP that need to be resolved in the right sequence as follows:
About Dr Robin WoolleyDr Robin Woolley is director of Transcend Corporate Advisors. View my profile and articles... |