A place for ideas, discussion and suggestions for making South Africa a better place.
Thursday, 10 December 2015
BizNews picks up my opionion piece on Economic Exclusion
Alec Hogg's website BizNews publishes my opinion piece this morning - it appeared on this blog a few weeks ago but in case you missed it you can read it here.
Monday, 7 December 2015
A desperate appeal for justice - the City of Joburg must hang its head in shame and cough up!
This morning I was copied on an email from Tshepo Kguaudi, whose tale of woe I wrote about on this blog some weeks ago - click here for the post.
Mr Kgaudi's business was destroyed by a combination of factors, chief amongst which was general inaction and negligence by the City of Johannesburg. The Public Protector issued a report in December last year detailing the remedial action expected from the City. To date, the City has done nothing and continues to obfuscate and delay.
This is typical of an institution which arrogantly ignores the welfare of its residents. The City says it supports small businesses, but this is just one more example that disproves this claim.
Any assistance readers of this blog can give to putting pressure on the City to reach a settlement with Mr Kgaudi will be welcome.
Read his email below:
Mr Kgaudi's business was destroyed by a combination of factors, chief amongst which was general inaction and negligence by the City of Johannesburg. The Public Protector issued a report in December last year detailing the remedial action expected from the City. To date, the City has done nothing and continues to obfuscate and delay.
This is typical of an institution which arrogantly ignores the welfare of its residents. The City says it supports small businesses, but this is just one more example that disproves this claim.
Any assistance readers of this blog can give to putting pressure on the City to reach a settlement with Mr Kgaudi will be welcome.
Read his email below:
Saturday, 5 December 2015
Chance Brothers - Lighting the World
During a visit to the UK in July I recorded an interview with broadcaster Graham Fisher, who lives in Birmingham and specialises in the history and heritage of the West Midlands. The interview was arranged by Mike Gibbs, publisher of History West Midlands Magazine, who has done so much to revive interest in what became known as the Black Country, the heart of Britain's industrial revolution.
In the interview I relate some of the factors leading to Chance Brothers becoming a major industrial enterprise from its founding in 1824 by my great great great uncle Robert Lucas Chance to the final closing of its doors in 1981. You can listen to the interview here.
In the interview I relate some of the factors leading to Chance Brothers becoming a major industrial enterprise from its founding in 1824 by my great great great uncle Robert Lucas Chance to the final closing of its doors in 1981. You can listen to the interview here.
Much of the interview focused on arguably the firm's best known product - lighthouse lenses and associated equipment - which can still be found lighting sealanes and harbours around the world. This is the subject of my book Lighthouses: The race to illuminate the world, published in 2008. For more info on the book you can visit my website here.
Listen also to this interview with Ray Drury, the last Chief Engineer at the Chance Brothers factory in Spon Lane, Smethwick. He reminisces about his experiences from being an apprentice draftsman in 1949 to his tearful locking of the gates of the flat glass plant for the last time in 1976.
Thursday, 26 November 2015
Letter to Business Day - Minister needs to re-enter debate
Business Day has published my letter today calling on Minister Lindiwe Zulu to re-enter the debate on labour reform, among other things.
You can read here at BDLive or in full below:
Dear Sir
For Minister Lindiwe Zulu to
earn the moniker “driver of change” (Drivers of change must pull together to
restart economy, Peter Attard Montalto, 24 November) she first needs to do the
following:
1.
Re-enter the
debate on labour reform. Shortly after her appointment as Small Business
Minister she made some sensible comments about how business was put off hiring
because of restrictive labour legislation. After Cosatu took her out at the
knees, she has not ventured into that territory again.
2.
Related to this,
she should support Herman Mashaba’s bid to have the Constitutional Court reform
Section 32 of the Labour Relations Act which mandates the Minister of Labour to
extend agreements concluded by sector bargaining councils to non-parties to
these agreements.
3.
Advocate tax and
regulatory reforms to allow small businesses to focus on growth rather
than grapple with burdensome and punitive red tape and disincentives.
Wednesday, 25 November 2015
Xenophobia must be recognised as a hate crime - speech in Parliament
Speech
by Toby Chance MP
Report
of the Ad Hoc Joint Committee on Probing Violence against Foreign Nationals
25th
November 2015
"Xenophobia
must be recognised as a hate crime"
Honourable Members, this report is a curate’s egg – good in parts but
in others it leaves a lot to be desired.
The Committee was unanimous in attributing the main causes of the
violence against foreign nationals between January and May this year to socio-economic
factors and wanton criminality. But it failed to attribute much of the violent
incidents to xenophobic prejudice.
It is a fact that competition for scarce resources in our townships,
cities and rural areas, is intense. Jobs are hard to come by and immigrants
invariably are more willing to accept lower wages and longer working hours than
locals.
Friday, 20 November 2015
Towards an inclusive economy
The Department
of Small Business Development, in partnership with the Small Business
Development Institute (SBDI), recently hosted the second National Small
Business Policy Colloquium at the IDC offices in Sandton. Members of the
Portfolio Committee were invited, and I was eager to attend to listen to current
thinking in one segment of the small business development ecosystem.
The word that
comes to mind in summing up the colloquium presentations and deliberations is
exclusion.
Small
businesses, especially those in the informal sector, have long been excluded
from the mainstream economy. Introducing the Colloquium, Xolani Qubeka, CEO of
the SBDI, spoke of the first and second economies, language first used by
former President Thabo Mbeki describing South Africa’s dual economy - “one
developed and globally connected and another localised and informal, display(ing)
many features of a global system of apartheid”.
Mbeki, speaking
at the 62nd Session of the UN Security Council in 2007, suggested this was not
just a South African phenomenon but a feature of the global economic system.
Wednesday, 18 November 2015
DA supports the Small Business Development Portfolio Committee BRRR report
Small Business Development
Portfolio Committee Budget Review & Recommendation Report
Declaration by Toby Chance, Shadow Minister
17th November 2015
Thank
you House Chairperson.
Almost
exactly a year ago I spoke at this podium about the excessive time it had taken
the newly formed Department of Small Business Development to organise itself
and begin to do its work.
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