A couple of weeks ago I was listening to Afternoon Drive on 702 with Xolani Gwala, and caught the tail end of a call from a very distressed man who related how negligence by the City of Joburg had resulted in his business closing down and him losing everything. No-one was listening to him and all attempts to get the city to respond had failed. The City was even ignoring a report by the Public Protector that found against the City, and called for remedial action.
I called 702 and asked for this man's details and not long afterwards we were in contact. His name is Tshepo Kgaudi, and his business was the PhindiK line of shoes, designed in South Africa, made in and imported from Brazil.
What I discovered was truly shocking. For five years, the City had done everything possible to protect itself and an ANC local councillor of dubious ethics, Councillor Mzwandile Zwane, from admitting its liability in the chain of events leading to the closure of the business.
A place for ideas, discussion and suggestions for making South Africa a better place.
Monday, 26 October 2015
Friday, 16 October 2015
Press statement: Small Business Ministry misses every one of its performance targets
Democratic Alliance press statement
by
Toby Chance MP
DA Shadow Minister of Small Business
Development
Small Business Ministry misses every one of its performance
targets
16 October 2015
Release: immediate
The Small Business Development
Department’ 2014/15 Annual Report reveals that Lindiwe Zulu’s newly formed
ministry has failed dismally in fulfilling its mandate by missing every single
one of its performance targets for the year.
Amid a crippling national
unemployment crisis, the department was set up to support the small, medium and
micro-sized enterprises (SMME) sector in creating new jobs and to “lead an
integrated approach to the promotion and development of Small Businesses and
Co-operatives through a focus on the economic and legislative drivers that
stimulate entrepreneurship to contribute to radical economic transformation”.
Friday, 9 October 2015
Innovation and entrepreneurship: are we commercialising our creativity?
South
Africa is in the top 5% of countries by value of its private equity market as a
proportion of GDP but in the bottom 5% by the same measure of venture capital.
This was
one of the startling facts to emerge at the Technological Innovation and
Entrepreneurship Round Table in Pretoria on Tuesday, which I attended. It was organised by the National Advisory Council
on Innovation (NACI), an agency of the Department of Science and Technology.
The
implication of this disparity is that we have a thriving market for private
investment in mostly medium to large businesses that generate predictable cash
flows and profits, but a weak market for investment – sourced from both the
public and private sectors and individuals – in start-up, early-stage and
development-stage businesses.
Wednesday, 30 September 2015
Unity Fellowship Church still at loggerheads with the City of Joburg
This afternoon I got a call from a member of the Unity Fellowship Church in Chiawelo, Soweto. He informed me that the church was conducting a sit-in at the Rea Vaya bus station next to the City of Joburg municipal offices in Braamfontein. They had just been muscled off the public square next to the Mayor's parlour, where they had requested a meeting with the Mayor to demand an answer to their petition lodged in June calling on the City to address the church's grievances.
Wednesday, 23 September 2015
Ad Hoc Joint Committee on Probing Violence against Foreign Nationals fails to adopt its report
The
Parliamentary Ad Hoc Joint Committee on Probing Violence against Foreign Nationals
sat yesterday at 5pm, supposedly for the last time. Except that of the twenty Members
of the Committee, only six showed up so it was unable to form the quorum
necessary to adopt its report.
My DA colleague Sej Motau MP and I were the only National Assembly Members to attend the meeting.
Sunday, 20 September 2015
Reflections on the LeaderEx / SiMODiSA Start-up Scale-Up Summit
The Sandton Convention Centre buzzed with excitement and expectation on Thursday as members of South Africa's entrepreneurial ecosystem - an informal club of growing confidence and distinction - gathered for the first combined LeaderEx / SiMODiSA Start-Up Scale-Up summit.
Aimed at achieving scale and critical mass, the merging of the two events provided participants with a smorgasbord of choice, with over 200 exhibitors, a programme of 40 intense masterclasses, and opportunities for one-on-one sessions with some of South Africa's top business coaches.
Aimed at achieving scale and critical mass, the merging of the two events provided participants with a smorgasbord of choice, with over 200 exhibitors, a programme of 40 intense masterclasses, and opportunities for one-on-one sessions with some of South Africa's top business coaches.
Friday, 18 September 2015
Letter to Business Day about the National Gazelles programme.
Today's Business Day publishes my letter drawing readers' attention to the fact that Thami Mazwai failed to disclose in his article of 9th September that the Department of Small Business Development hired his company, Mtiya Dynamics, to formulate the National Gazelles programme he writes so approvingly about.
I have sent a written question to Minister Zulu to explain how the Department procured the services of Mtiya Dynamics.
Read my earlier blog post here for a longer version of the letter.
I have sent a written question to Minister Zulu to explain how the Department procured the services of Mtiya Dynamics.
Read my earlier blog post here for a longer version of the letter.
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