logo
How ANC's collusion with big businesses undermines transformation

How ANC's collusion with big businesses undermines transformation

IOL News17 hours ago
Nco Dube a political economist, businessman, and social commentator.
Image: Supplied
South Africa's post-apartheid journey has been marked by a bold constitutional promise: to dismantle the economic structures of racial privilege and build a society where the black majority can share in the country's wealth and opportunities. Central to this promise are the empowerment laws, Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) and Affirmative Action (AA), crafted to drive economic inclusion and redress decades of exclusion.
Yet, nearly three decades on, the slow pace of transformation and the growing backlash against these laws reveal a darker reality: a coordinated agenda, both local and global, to halt transformation, preserve white privilege, and enrich a narrow elite.
At the heart of this crisis lies a deeply troubling collusion between big business and ANC elites. A symbiotic relationship that has subverted the original intent of empowerment laws, turning them into tools for elite enrichment rather than broad-based economic justice.
The Promise and the Betrayal of Empowerment
When the ANC was unbanned in 1990 and South Africa embarked on its democratic journey, the vision was clear: to dismantle apartheid's economic legacy and create a more equitable society. BEE and AA laws were designed to open doors for black South Africans through ownership, management, employment equity, and skills development.
There have been pockets of progress. Black ownership and representation in certain sectors have increased, and a black middle class has emerged. Some black entrepreneurs have thrived, and certain companies have made genuine strides in employment equity. But for the ordinary black South African, the man on the street, these gains have often been invisible or out of reach. Poverty, unemployment, and inequality remain entrenched, and the benefits of transformation have been captured by a small, politically connected elite.
This failure is no accident. It is the product of systemic corruption, incompetence, and a political will that has been fatally compromised by the very leaders entrusted with delivering transformation.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Ad loading
The Symbiotic Relationship Between Big Business and ANC Elites
Since the unbanning of the ANC, a problematic alliance has formed between big business and ANC political elites. White monopoly capital, anxious to protect its interests in the new dispensation, extended lucrative BEE deals to ANC insiders. This was not broad-based empowerment, it was a transactional pact: business secured access to government contracts, regulatory favour, and influence, while ANC elites gained wealth and power.
This arrangement has had devastating consequences for genuine transformation:
Elite Enrichment Through Selective BEE Deals: Instead of empowering the masses, many BEE deals were structured to benefit a narrow group of ANC-connected individuals. Shares, directorships, and business opportunities were handed to political insiders, creating a black elite that often mirrored the exclusivity of the apartheid-era white elite. The majority of black South Africans saw little direct benefit from these deals. Empirical evidence shows that many beneficiaries of these deals were ANC apparatchiks, with the majority of black South Africans seeing little direct benefit.
Board Appointments and Political Influence: At least 56 ANC politicians have held directorships in major JSE-listed companies, blurring the lines between political power and corporate governance. This overlap ensured that business interests were protected and that policies favoured entrenched elites rather than broad economic inclusion.
Research shows a significant overlap between ANC politicians and the boards of major JSE-listed companies. Many of them holding multiple directorships across a wide array of companies. This integration allowed big business to secure their interests by aligning with politically influential individuals, ensuring favourable treatment and policy influence, rather than driving genuine transformation.
Fronting and Window-Dressing: Many companies engaged in fronting, appointing black individuals to nominal positions to meet BEE requirements without transferring real control or economic benefit. This practice allowed companies to access government contracts and benefits fraudulently, undermining the integrity of empowerment laws. While real control and benefits remain with the original (often white) owners.
Examples include listing low-level black employees as company directors without their knowledge or creating side agreements that strip black shareholders of real power.
State Capture and Policy Manipulation: The alliance between business and ANC elites facilitated state capture, where government resources and policy were manipulated to serve private interests.
The mutually beneficial relationship between business and ANC elites has led to 'state capture,' where business interests influence legislation and procurement processes for their own benefit, often at the expense of the broader public. This has included shaping policies to favour certain companies, securing lucrative government contracts, and manipulating regulatory frameworks to protect established interests.
The Bosasa scandal, for example, involved manufacturing BEE credentials and funnelling money to the ANC through corrupt tender processes, with cash bribes and fraudulent invoicing used to secure government business and support election campaigns.
This collusion has transformed empowerment laws from instruments of justice into mechanisms for elite enrichment and preservation of privilege. The focus on enriching a politically connected elite, rather than fostering broad-based participation and economic inclusion, has led to widespread public disillusionment and persistent inequality. The original vision of BEE as a tool for mass empowerment has been subverted by collusion between big business and ANC elites, resulting in a narrow base of beneficiaries and limited progress for the majority.
The Global Rightward Shift and the Anti-Transformation Agenda
Adding fuel to the fire is the global political climate. The rise of right-wing populism in the United States and elsewhere has emboldened anti-transformation forces in South Africa. Figures like Donald Trump and Elon Musk have amplified narratives of white victimhood, including the false and dangerous 'white genocide' myth targeting South Africa.
White interest groups such as the Democratic Alliance (DA), Solidarity, and Afriforum have seized this moment to push back against transformation. They cloak their agendas in rhetoric about 'meritocracy' and 'non-racialism,' but their true aim is to preserve apartheid-era privileges and slow the pace of change.
Meanwhile, as the ANC faces potential electoral decline, white monopoly capital is already seeking new political partners to maintain its influence, regardless of who governs. The anti-transformation agenda is thus both a local and international phenomenon, threatening to roll back the hard-won gains of the past three decades.
Successes, Failures, and the Road Ahead
It is important to acknowledge the successes. There are black entrepreneurs, professionals, and leaders who have leveraged empowerment laws to build businesses and create jobs. Some sectors have made genuine progress in diversifying ownership and management.
But these successes are exceptions, not the rule. The systemic failures of corruption, elite capture, fronting, and state capture have undermined the transformative potential of empowerment laws.
The struggle over South Africa's empowerment laws is a struggle for the soul of the nation. Will the country continue down a path where transformation is hollowed out by corruption and elite collusion, or will it reclaim the constitutional imperative to build an inclusive economy for all its people? The stakes could not be higher.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A ‘mockery' or ‘flimsy attack'? ANC and DA scrap over Tshwane city manager's appointment
A ‘mockery' or ‘flimsy attack'? ANC and DA scrap over Tshwane city manager's appointment

The Citizen

timean hour ago

  • The Citizen

A ‘mockery' or ‘flimsy attack'? ANC and DA scrap over Tshwane city manager's appointment

The DA has hit back calling it a 'flimsy legal attack'. The appointment of Tshwane city manager Johann Mettler was conducted in a manner that creates a mockery of the prescripts governing the appointment of senior managers, claims the ANC. 'The ANC will request its councillors to ensure that the speaker is requested to convene a special council meeting as soon as possible, in order to allow the council to take a resolution on the validity of the appointment of the city manager,' the party said this week. The party has accused Mettler of lacking experience for the job. It said applicants were required to have 12 years of experience, of which at least five years must be at the senior management level, but Mettler only had 11 years of experience and should have been eliminated at the initial stage of shortlisting. 'His inclusion in the names of the shortlisted candidates is unlawful and irregular. Therefore, the appointment of Mettler as the City Manager is null and void and stands to be set aside in a competent court.' DA consulting lawyers DA Tshwane caucus leader Cilliers Brink said he wrote to Tshwane mayor Nasiphi Moya to warn her against any move to have Mettler's appointment terminated or to use a baseless legal pretext to pressure him to resign. Brink said the DA, as a party represented in the council, were consulting lawyers in the matter 'Aside from the flimsy legal attack on Mettler's appointment mouthed by the ANC, it is clear that the ANC coalition in Tshwane wants to replace Mettler with one of their own deployed cadres. 'On a number of occasions, Mettler has been attacked by the EFF. Obakeng Ramabodu, the EFF Tshwane leader and the MMC has said in the Tshwane council that the party will get rid of Mettler. He has also accused him, without any evidence, of leaking confidential information,' he said. Brink said the most notable of these attacks happened when it became clear that the city would not drop the case against city officials implicated in an irregular contract award to a consortium led by ANC funder Edwin Sodi. 'Whatever legal pretext the ANC coalition devises, the point is that the party would prefer one of their own deployed cadres, not an independent professional, in the job of municipal manager.' ALSO READ: Tshwane speaker survives a motion of no confidence Mayor consulting with MEC ActionSA national chairperson Michael Beaumont said ActionSA would not allow instability in the city. 'While ActionSA acknowledges the ANC's right to express its opinion, we also affirm that coalitions must make space for differing perspectives, provided this does not undermine stability. 'The multi-party coalition in Tshwane has deliberated on this matter and noted concerns that the panel which interviewed Mettler included additional panellists beyond what is potentially permitted by the relevant regulations,' he said. Beaumont said this procedural irregularity occurred during the term of the DA-led mayoralty. 'We further note the concerns raised by the ANC regarding Mr Mettler's alleged lack of relevant experience and possible non-compliance with the requirements of the Municipal Finance Management Act. 'It is important to emphasise that these matters have not been raised by the MEC and have not yet been fully deliberated upon by the coalition. 'That said, the legal implications of asking the council to reverse an appointment at this stage remain uncertain and would require careful consideration,' he added. Beaumont said the coalition had mandated mayor Moya to engage with MEC Mamabolo on this matter, with the aim of clarifying the issues and identifying a resolution that upholds both the law and the stability of the city's administration. 'Her ongoing engagement with the MEC on senior appointments, as resolved by the political management committee, is both appropriate and constructive. 'We urge all coalition partners to be guided by this resolution and to refrain from unilateral actions that may jeopardise the hard-won progress of this coalition government,' he said. Beaumont said ActionSA's position is clear and consistent. 'We will not support the removal of any senior manager unless there is a clear, lawful and governance-based reason for doing so. 'This position reflects a core coalition principle that prioritises stability, continuity and performance in the city's senior administration.' NOW READ: Tshwane makes strides in corruption fight as city tackles R13bn irregular expenditure backlog

ANC blames back-room for scuppering votes of no confidence in Endumeni Mayor, Speaker
ANC blames back-room for scuppering votes of no confidence in Endumeni Mayor, Speaker

The Citizen

time2 hours ago

  • The Citizen

ANC blames back-room for scuppering votes of no confidence in Endumeni Mayor, Speaker

ANC blames back-room for scuppering votes of no confidence in Endumeni Mayor, Speaker Following last week's failed motions of no confidence in Endumeni Mayor Andrew Mkhize and Speaker Andile Nsibande, Democratic Alliance (DA) councillor and MPAC chairperson, Naresh Gopie, has dismissed claims that the DA supports corruption. Gopie stated that the party remains committed to democracy, transparency, and accountability. 'The DA categorically refutes any allegations of backing corruption in Endumeni,' he said, adding that the party opposes 'any form of corruption, hooliganism, or racism.' Gopie said the DA's goal is to promote good governance and restore municipal order through pragmatic solutions, not political mudslinging. 'Endumeni, like a neglected tree, can bear fruit again with care, dedication and accountability,' he added. He called on all stakeholders to work together toward building a resilient and functional municipality, saying the DA is focused on integrity and service to the people. ANC Chief Whip Cllr Siphamandla Kheswa blamed a 'back-room deal' between the IFP and DA for collapsing the vote. Kheswa alleged the IFP conceded to DA demands to alter the final municipal budget and accept interventions by Treasury, Public Works, and CoGTA—an implicit admission of the governance failures raised in the motion. He slammed the adopted budget as 'unfunded' and criticised the coalition for ignoring public consultation, cutting key service delivery provisions, and spending R8 million on failed legal battles. Kheswa concluded that while the speaker and mayor have survived and remained in office through political expediency, we (the opposition) were vindicated by their own admissions that they have dismally failed. 'This is a coalition of chaos. 'They have failed dismally and now cling to power through deals and desperation – not through service or leadership,' concluded Kheswa. The ANC has vowed to continue holding the administration accountable as financial and governance woes deepen. HAVE YOUR SAY: Like our Facebook page, follow us on Twitter and Instagram or email us at [email protected]. Add us on WhatsApp 071 277 1394. At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Latest petrol price increase puts SA consumers on backfoot again
Latest petrol price increase puts SA consumers on backfoot again

The Citizen

time2 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Latest petrol price increase puts SA consumers on backfoot again

With a fuel price increase hot on the heels of increases in rates and taxes in the metros, there seems to be no way out for consumers. The latest petrol price increase puts struggling South African consumers on the backfoot again after a few months of softer fuel prices, which also led to lower inflation as well as lower interest rates. Now geopolitical issues in the Middle East sent the oil price soaring again and South African consumers are paying the price. Hot on the heels of the small decrease in the price of petrol in June this year, the news of a substantial hike in the price of petrol from 2 July came as a shock to motorists across the country. South Africans were counting on a little relief at the pumps in July to ease the financial burden that has driven millions of households to the edge of despair. The July increase pushes the price of 95 Unleaded petrol up by 55 cents to R21.87 per litre and 93 Unleaded up by 52 cents to R21.79, while diesel increases by between 82 and 84 cents per litre. ALSO READ: Motorists warned to brace for hefty petrol price hike from midnight Major geopolitical factors that impacted the department of petroleum and mineral resources decision included the political seesaw that led to the Israel/Iran conflict and spiked the price of Brent crude oil by as much as 13% in the aftermath, leading to increases at the pumps. Thankfully, the rand remained surprisingly resilient in the face of the resultant market turbulence. Fuel price hike on top of increase in rates and taxes As if this is not enough reason to dash any last hope of a respite, Tuesday 1 July marked the start of the municipal financial year when local authorities increase rates and taxes. This means households in major metros across the country will see increases to monthly rates for electricity, water, sanitation, refuse removal and property rates they pay. South Africans can expect above-inflation hikes this year as cities continue to operate under strained conditions and energy experts are warning that households could see their bills shoot up anywhere between 30% and 80%, especially if their consumption is typically low. This is largely due to a new tariff structure being implemented by Eskom, which aims to align prices with the cost of supply and to reduce subsidies. ALSO READ: Here's how to manage household electricity usage as municipal tariff increases kick in Against this grim backdrop, the latest 2025 Energy Market Projections report, compiled by Cresco in collaboration with Standard Bank Corporate and Investment Banking, shows that while load shedding may have taken a backseat temporarily, a new energy crisis is looming if the country fails to build new capacity. According to the report, South Africa is not adding new energy generation capacity fast enough to prevent another severe electricity crisis when Eskom begins decommissioning its coal plants. Behind this is the fact that the country is not increasing its energy supply at a sufficient rate to facilitate faster economic growth, which means that any sharp pickup in activity will result in demand outstripping supply. Living increases force struggling consumers to use credit Neil Roets, CEO of Debt Rescue, warns with no end in sight to the volley of living cost increases, coupled with consumers already cutting back as much as they can, the latest fuel price increase will cut deeply into the little disposable income people still have left, if they have any to spare at all. 'In fact, along with the soaring electricity prices and the municipal rate hikes in July, millions of households will be forced towards financial disaster. This is a red flag that should not be ignored. Along with this, the salaries of South Africans fail to keep up with rising living costs, leading many to turn to debt simply to survive each month and buy the basics they need to survive.' This is echoed by insights from the latest BankservAfrica Take-home Pay Index (BTPI), which tracks approximately 3.8 million salary earners in South Africa. It revealed that the nominal average take-home pay decreased to R17 296 in May 2025, 1.3% lower than the R17 532 registered in April. ALSO READ: Take-home pay slides for third month with grim job opportunities and earnings South Africans can't afford to set money aside Roets points out that this marks a third consecutive month of decline in average nominal take-home pay, reflecting a muted economic environment with stalled growth and global shocks affecting investment decisions and confidence levels. Unsurprisingly, he says, this is also a major contributor to the country's escalating consumer debt crisis, with a recent Debt Rescue survey, conducted to measure the real plight of indebted consumers, showing that half of the participants polled (50%) cannot afford basic necessities like food, electricity, or fuel due to a lack of available funds. A full 50% said they have had to turn to credit to pay for these everyday needs in the past 12 months. Roets says this reflects the vicious cycle of poverty and debt that has become a way of life for millions of South African consumers, seriously impeding their and their families' survival. 'It is a bitter irony that this coincides with National Savings Month, a time meant to promote saving, yet many South Africans can barely cover essentials, let alone set money aside.'

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