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BEE compliance rule may hurt top companies

Johannesburg - Some of the biggest companies in South Africa could fall foul of regulations and lose business after the government changed how it scores their compliance with regulations compelling them to give shares to black people.

The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) published a notice on Tuesday in which it said that black empowerment programmes benefiting community and special interest trusts and employees will contribute less to a company’s compliance rating.

The rating is needed to secure business from government and some other companies.

“It’s a really big issue,” Verushca Pillay, a director at Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr’s corporate and commercial practice in Johannesburg, said by phone on Wednesday. The black empowerment “compliance level is relevant to them winning business from other companies and from government,” she said.

Black empowerment regulations are designed to boost participation in the economy by black citizens and other groups who were disadvantaged during apartheid.

The rules had, alongside ownership, given companies benefit for training black managers, promoting women and helping develop communities near operations.

Regulations challenged

The change in regulations could mean empowerment programmes benefiting poorer parts of the population are unwound and end up going to black industrialists, Shaun Smit, a director with Johannesburg-based black empowerment advisory firm Transcend Capital, said by phone.

The regulations could be challenged by companies, Pillay said.

The empowerment programme has created black businessmen, some of whom have built up wealth of hundreds of millions of dollars. Prominent beneficiaries include Patrice Motsepe, the first black South African dollar billionaire and the brother-in-law of Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, who also took stakes in assets ranging from mines to a McDonald’s franchise.

Black empowerment investment companies include Cape Town-based Hosken Consolidated Investments [JSE:HCI], which has interests in media, casinos and buses and is valued at R16.7bn.

DTI spokesperson Sidwell Medupe didn’t immediately respond to messages seeking comment.

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