logo
Proposed bill set to improve the ease of doing business

Proposed bill set to improve the ease of doing business

The Herald20-06-2025
The Nelson Mandela Bay Business Chamber has welcomed the department of trade, industry & competition's (DTIC) commitment to finalising a comprehensive omnibus bill which will reduce unnecessary red tape and improve the ease of doing business.
The chamber said this marked a critical step in cutting through excessive regulatory red tape that constrained economic activity, limited investment, and affected business confidence, especially in regions such as the Bay that have huge potential but where investors may become deterred by the onerous requirements and lengthy time frames to implement planned investments.
Business Chamber CEO Denise van Huyssteen said the proposed legislative reforms signalled a long-awaited shift in government's approach, acknowledging the urgent need to dismantle structural barriers that have long held back economic expansion and job creation.
'By targeting key pieces of legislation, including the Infrastructure Development Act, the National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act, and the International Trade Administration Act, the DTIC is demonstrating the sort of bold policy leadership the country desperately needs,' she said.
'For the metro, this legislative reform package is more than just national policy, and is an action needed to unlock the potential of our local economy, create jobs and revitalise the metro's industrial base.
'This aligns with our strategy of positioning the metro as the Bay of Opportunity and a leading manufacturing base in the African continent.'
Van Huyssteen said updating the Infrastructure Development Act would directly benefit Nelson Mandela Bay by enabling faster planning and execution of catalytic infrastructure projects, whether the focus is on maintaining and upgrading ageing water, sanitation and electricity infrastructure, or improving logistics corridors that connect local manufacturers to domestic and global markets.
Efficient infrastructure is not just a convenience, it is the foundation of job creation and industrial competitiveness in this metro, she said.
Meanwhile, she said reforming the outdated National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act would bring consistency and predictability to the local property development process.
'Bay businesses have long faced frustration with municipal delays, misalignment between departments, and outdated regulatory frameworks.
'Modernising this act will help unlock stalled developments, attract private sector investment, and support spatial transformation in the city.
'Strengthening the International Trade Administration Act is particularly crucial for our region's manufacturing and export sectors, which are under severe strain from cheap imports entering the market.
'A more robust trade enforcement framework will level the playing field for local producers, protect jobs and support localisation.
'Supporting local products is key to the Bay's economic turnaround.
'When local businesses, from car assemblers to packaging manufacturers, are supported, they hire locally, pay local suppliers and reinvest in the community.
'This multiplies economic activity and helps reduce unemployment.
'Every purchase made from a local business helps sustain jobs in sectors such as manufacturing, logistics, services, technology and those deeply rooted within communities.
'For one person employed directly in manufacturing, four direct jobs are created downstream.
'For every one person employed directly, 10 people are supported.'
The CEO said further that choosing an SA-made product enabled investment into local community support programmes and initiatives to help address critical areas of need such as education, skills development, hunger and poverty alleviation, health care and sports development.
'However, the chamber emphasises that regulatory reform alone is not enough.
Its success hinges on resolving systemic challenges that continue to affect business confidence and erode our metro's potential.'
These included: Logistics inefficiencies at local ports and within the rail network that raise operational costs for local industries;
Unreliable water, sanitation and electricity infrastructure, which has severely affected manufacturers and other small to large businesses;
Widespread crime and safety concerns, which increase the cost of doing business and discourage new investment;
Lack of delivery of basic municipal services; and
Lack of co-ordinated implementation, which continues to stall high-impact projects that could drive job creation and industrial renewal.
'The chamber believes that bold legislation must be matched by bold execution.
'The implementation of these reforms must be backed by real accountability and supported by partnerships at both a national and local level.
'The business community cannot continue to operate in an environment of uncertainty, weak infrastructure and unreliable service delivery.
'As such, we urge the government to stay the course and ensure that this initiative moves from intention to impact and helps the country chart a sustainable economic path which will create much needed jobs.'
The Herald
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inflation hits 10-month high at 3.5% in July
Inflation hits 10-month high at 3.5% in July

Mail & Guardian

time2 minutes ago

  • Mail & Guardian

Inflation hits 10-month high at 3.5% in July

The key drivers of price growth in July were food and non-alcoholic beverages (up 5.7% and contributing 1.0 percentage points). Photo: Supplied South Africa's annual consumer inflation accelerated to 3.5% in July from 3.0% the previous month, driven by food and non-alcoholic beverages, This was the second consecutive year-on-year increase and the highest rate in 10 months. On a month-on-month basis, consumer prices rose by 0.9% in July, after a 0.3% increase in June. The key drivers of price growth in July were food and non-alcoholic beverages (up 5.7% and contributing 1.0 percentage points) and housing and utilities (up 4.3% and contributing 1.0 percentage points), the statistics agency said. During the period, the annual inflation rate for goods was 3.2%, up from 2.3% in June, and services was 3.6%, down from 3.7% in the previous month. South Africa's Last month, 'It is important to sustain this progress and to minimise uncertainty about the longer-term objectives of monetary policy,' Kganyago said in the July MPC meeting. 'Therefore, the [monetary policy committee] now prefers inflation to settle at 3%. In line with this, we have decided to aim for the bottom of our inflation target range, of 3 to 6%.' 'We welcome the recent moderation in inflation expectations and would like to see expectations fall further. This would expand policy space and make our framework more robust to shocks. We will use forecasts with a 3% inflation anchor at future meetings.'

Ecosystem of injustice: The hidden system that keeps rural South Africa unequal
Ecosystem of injustice: The hidden system that keeps rural South Africa unequal

Mail & Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • Mail & Guardian

Ecosystem of injustice: The hidden system that keeps rural South Africa unequal

Certification and social investment awards hide the harms that farmworkers suffer. Photo: File South Africa's rural crisis did not begin yesterday. It is the product of a vast, interconnected system designed to protect corporate profits, maintain elite land ownership and keep farmworkers, forestry dwellers and small-scale producers invisible. This system is not broken. It is working exactly as it was built to. At its core are the agri-businesses and export companies whose logos fill supermarkets and dominate award lists in wine, fruit, forestry and livestock. They speak the language of sustainability, inclusion and social impact. They win awards but their profits rely on cheap labour, insecure tenure and rural communities stripped of political power. Surrounding them is a web of support. Investors label these companies 'ESG-compliant' (environmental, social and corporate governance). NGOs, often funded by corporate social investment budgets, run feel-good projects that avoid deeper change. Certification bodies hand out stamps of approval. Media houses report on export volumes but ignore evictions. Government departments frequently look the other way. This is the ecosystem of injustice — a carefully coordinated network that sanitises harm and rewards complicity. As chief executive of the Surplus People Project, I see the toll this system takes. I have walked through plantation villages where sewage flows past crumbling homes with no title deeds. I have sat with farmworkers dismissed without pension or recourse. I have met women who face daily violence, without police protection or labour rights. These are not exceptional stories. They are what happens when power goes unchecked. The failures are systemic. In multiple cases, women farmworkers have turned to the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) after years of unsafe conditions, wage exploitation and intimidation. Reports from the This is why the Most South Africans will never see these struggles up close. For many in the middle class, rural life is a distant reality. But our pensions fund the same agri-businesses. Our supermarket purchases come from the same farms. Our charity reinforces the same silence. This system is upheld not only by business but by the state. Land reform stalls. Labour protections go unenforced. Farmworker equity schemes collapse without oversight. Public employment programmes offer temporary relief but no lasting progress. Police remain bystanders as families are evicted. The budget exists. The laws exist. What is missing is the political will required to hold power accountable. Too many NGOs have also stopped short. Some deliver services that alleviate immediate hardship but refuse to confront the cause. Some actively shield corporate interests while the people they claim to serve are evicted, poisoned by chemicals and denied water and dignity. We need to name this clearly. We are not dealing with isolated failures. We are confronting a full-scale system of dispossession. It will not be dismantled through policy tweaks, PR campaigns or corporate awards. It will be dismantled only when we expose its parts and demand change at every level: land, labour, finance, governance and public discourse. At the Surplus People Project, we are working towards mapping this system, to show how agribusiness, government departments, financiers, media and the public form an ecosystem that extracts wealth from rural communities while pretending to be socially responsible. This is not about blaming one actor. It is about revealing design. If we want justice, we must understand the machinery of harm. Then we must ask: 'Where do we intervene and what levers can shift the system?' That is the real work. The work ahead is systemic. It is uncomfortable and demanding. But it is same ecosystem that protects injustice can be disrupted. Laws can be enforced. Funds redirected. Communities organised. Public consciousness awakened. This is the work of transformation. It must be done. Charity soothes the wound. Justice closes it. Don't just do good. Dismantle what causes harm. Brian Adams is the chief executive of the Surplus People Project.

Goodyear closure demands a paradigm shift: Workers must take over factories
Goodyear closure demands a paradigm shift: Workers must take over factories

Mail & Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • Mail & Guardian

Goodyear closure demands a paradigm shift: Workers must take over factories

The newly introduced Transformation Fund can be used to enable cooperative reindustrialisation and create socially useful production by workers taking over factories when the owners close them down. Photo: File The For decades, people have been told to welcome foreign investment, to plead with multinationals to stay and to tie their futures to the whims of corporate boardrooms in Detroit, Frankfurt or Shanghai. Yet the Goodyear closure shows again that loyalty begins and ends with the bottom line. When profit margins shrink, workers are retrenched, factories are closed and communities are left with despair. This cycle has played out not only in Kariega but also in Gqeberha, East London and beyond. It is a cycle of devastation and it will not stop until workers themselves chart a new course. The moment demands a paradigm shift. Instead of fighting for corporations to maintain their grip, workers and communities must demand control over production itself. This means reclaiming abandoned factories and putting them to use for Worker-controlled factories are not a utopian dream. They are a concrete necessity. The skills, technical knowledge and experience are already present in the workforce. What is missing is the political will to support workers in reclaiming these spaces and repurposing them for human need rather than shareholder profit. And now there are many examples of this in Argentina, the United States and elsewhere, where workers have done exactly that and have 'recovered' factories and built communities around them. A paradigm shift also means rejecting the false promise of capitalist economies of scale — the idea that bigger is always better, that centralised corporate power leads to efficiency. In reality, economies of scale concentrate wealth and decision-making into fewer and fewer hands, leaving workers disempowered. A socially useful reindustrialisation, rooted in worker control, can break this cycle by prioritising community needs over corporate returns. This struggle cannot be separated from global politics. The rise of Trump and the return For South Africa, this means intensified pressure to serve as cheap labour One of the most effective ways to reject US mercantilism is for South African workers to put their skills into socially useful transitions beyond the capitalist path of economies of scale. By doing so, we break dependency on foreign corporate monopolies and create industries that serve our needs directly. This is not isolationism, but international solidarity — workers in Kariega linking arms with workers in Detroit, São Paulo or Guangzhou to demand a global economy built on cooperation and mutual survival, not competition and profit. Transformation fund: A test for the working class The Goodyear closure also raises pressing questions about South Africa's Transformation Fund. The newly introduced Now is the time to test it for what it should be: a weapon for the working class. The Transformation Fund must be redirected to support worker takeovers of factories, provide capital for cooperative reindustrialisation and finance projects that generate socially useful production. If it fails this test, then it will be exposed as yet another tool for elite enrichment. If it succeeds, it could become a cornerstone in building a new economy — one where abandoned factories become hubs of democratic ownership, where unemployment is fought through collective enterprise and where the dignity of work is restored. The Goodyear closure should not be remembered as another chapter of industrial decline. It must be remembered as the moment workers began to take back control, rejecting both local corporate plunder and global mercantilist domination and paving the way for a future built on solidarity, justice, and worker power. Siyabulela Mama is with Amandla! magazine as a member of the editorial collective and an organiser for the .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store