Today's Business Day publishes my letter on why triangulation in the al-Bashir case is a bad idea. Read it here or below. You can read Michael Harris' article which prompted my letter, here. The article caused quite a bit of debate and correspondence. It is interesting the EU delegation in SA last week also said South Africa should have detained al-Bashir. This controversy is not going to die down, especially since the government is contesting the court order ex post facto.
A place for ideas, discussion and suggestions for making South Africa a better place.
Tuesday, 28 July 2015
Empowering women traders and entrepreneurs in Cape Town
On Saturday and Monday I attended two events which show how much is going on quietly behind the scenes to empower women in business in Cape Town.
The first was the Ward 57 Women Economic Empowerment Symposium, the second was the launch of a campaign to equip small traders with a sales kit to sell cigarettes backed up by the very innovative M4JAM system of making extra money. Women make up the bulk of informal traders in this part of the world, particularly on the Cape Flats. Though on the margins of the economy, some of them are breaking into bigger markets and developing products that can compete in the formal economy. Events such as these give a boost to that momentum.
The first was the Ward 57 Women Economic Empowerment Symposium, the second was the launch of a campaign to equip small traders with a sales kit to sell cigarettes backed up by the very innovative M4JAM system of making extra money. Women make up the bulk of informal traders in this part of the world, particularly on the Cape Flats. Though on the margins of the economy, some of them are breaking into bigger markets and developing products that can compete in the formal economy. Events such as these give a boost to that momentum.
Sunday, 26 July 2015
Interview with the Sunday Tribune on measures to assist small businesses
Today's Sunday Tribune business section features a Q&A with me on Page 4. Here is the article.
You can read my full answers below.
NOTE: There is an error in the article on the BBBEE scores for procurement and enterprise development. It says the combined points is 25, whereas the correct number is 25 for procurement and 15 for enterprise and supplier development.
Thursday, 16 July 2015
Speech to the British Chamber of Business in Southern Africa
This evening DA leader Mmusi Maimane and I addressed a gathering of business people at the Inanda Club in Johannesburg at the invitation of the British Chamber of Business in Southern Africa. Their monthly meetings are an opportunity for discussion and networking among an important collection of leaders in the SA business community.
Below is the text of my prepared speech.
Below is the text of my prepared speech.
It is an honour
and my pleasure to be invited to speak to you here this evening. The decision to
re-establish the British Chamber of Business in Southern Africa is to be
welcomed by everyone with a stake in building relations between Britain and
this region.
British – South
Africa trade relations have traditionally been very close. South Africa is
Britain’s sixth biggest trading partner globally, while Britain remains South
Africa’s seventh largest export market.
Tuesday, 14 July 2015
Chance Brothers illuminating the world - appearing last night in Birmingham, UK
Publisher of History West Midlands magazine, Mike Gibbs has a passion for the Black Country, an area centred on Wolverhampton, Dudley and Smethwick a few miles west of Birmingham in the UK. He was born and bred there and apart from a few years in South Africa has lived there all his life.
A successful and now retired businessman, he devotes most of his time to establishing and supporting ventures which aim to uncover the rich history of this part of Britain, which was the crucible of the Industrial Revolution and home to many famous inventors and industrial dynasties.
One of these dynasties was the Chance family, who from the 1770s built a trading then a manufacturing business of considerable scale which for five generations led Britain's glassmaking industry. At its height in the early 20th century the firm employed over 3 500 people. The factory finally closed its doors in 1981.
A successful and now retired businessman, he devotes most of his time to establishing and supporting ventures which aim to uncover the rich history of this part of Britain, which was the crucible of the Industrial Revolution and home to many famous inventors and industrial dynasties.
One of these dynasties was the Chance family, who from the 1770s built a trading then a manufacturing business of considerable scale which for five generations led Britain's glassmaking industry. At its height in the early 20th century the firm employed over 3 500 people. The factory finally closed its doors in 1981.
Sunday, 12 July 2015
Solving the small business finance conundrum
Today's Sunday Times carries my opinion piece on small business finance - you can read it here.
I had to cut it to 750 words. For the full version, read on below.
I had to cut it to 750 words. For the full version, read on below.
Most surveys of small business cite
difficulties in accessing finance as one of the top three challenges they face.
But talk to providers of finance and they say the opposite: there is a scarcity
of fundable small businesses out there.
Solving this conundrum is at the heart of
South Africa’s biggest challenge: how to create the 11 million new jobs we need
by 2030 to reduce unemployment to 6% from its current 36%.
Saturday, 11 July 2015
Attacks on foreign nationals driven by competition for resources
Film-goers will recall director Neill
Blomkamp’s sci-fi movie District 9
for its dystopian portrayal of a Johannesburg township under the menacing
influence of the Prawns. These
creatures, from a distant planet, established a precarious existence in a camp
set up to keep them away from locals, who despised them for being “non-humans”
yet admired their advanced technology and weaponry.
The film was released in 2009, shortly
after South Africa suffered an outbreak of violence against foreigners which
left over sixty people dead. The parallels between these attacks and the anti-Prawn sentiments of District 9 were not
lost on political and social commentators.
The 2008 attacks were labelled xenophobic
because most of the victims were foreigners. They were accused of taking jobs
from South Africans and using unfair and sometimes illegal practices to out-wit
local traders, putting them out of business and leading to widespread
resentment and envy.
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