quinta-feira, 1 de abril de 2010
TEC "The president says it has failed" South Africa's Black Economic Empowerment comes under scrutiny
BEE has failed if and only if anyone was ever naive enough to believe that it would dent those skewed ratios relevantly in the short-run.
It simply cannot and would not, such is the nature of things when a skewed society was built over many decades.
BEE is at best an attempt - a valid one - to start reversing a consequence of the old social order.
Under this light it might even be seen as a moderate success, excluding those black noveau-riche flaunting their wealth acquired by dint of cronyism or misplaced feeling of entitlement.
South African society has started to change by taking a first important step in the right direction.
People who hold public office or have any level of responsibility in the country should know that it will take decades for significant ratio changes that gradually reflect a new more balanced society overall.
Stress should be permanently placed on education for all South Africans, especially those who were neglected in the past.
As growing numbers of qualified, educated blacks come on to the job market so will their numbers in qualified employment rise steadily.
Time is key to it however politically and socially despairing.
Favouring entitlement over abilities would only exacerbate the problem - creating new ones - and is no solution to legitimate aspirations of the black majority.In fact, it seriously undermines those aspirations.
In the meantime the South African government should do everything in its power to retain skills in the country regardless of all else.
More wealth is created by a more skilled workforce which in turn is going to provide more employment to a better educated population.
Enlightened public policy is called for taking full account of time and circumstance despite wishful thinking.
Politically a hard act to balance - a very tough one indeed - but an inescapable challenge for responsible government.
It will be successful in the long-run.
It simply cannot and would not, such is the nature of things when a skewed society was built over many decades.
BEE is at best an attempt - a valid one - to start reversing a consequence of the old social order.
Under this light it might even be seen as a moderate success, excluding those black noveau-riche flaunting their wealth acquired by dint of cronyism or misplaced feeling of entitlement.
South African society has started to change by taking a first important step in the right direction.
People who hold public office or have any level of responsibility in the country should know that it will take decades for significant ratio changes that gradually reflect a new more balanced society overall.
Stress should be permanently placed on education for all South Africans, especially those who were neglected in the past.
As growing numbers of qualified, educated blacks come on to the job market so will their numbers in qualified employment rise steadily.
Time is key to it however politically and socially despairing.
Favouring entitlement over abilities would only exacerbate the problem - creating new ones - and is no solution to legitimate aspirations of the black majority.In fact, it seriously undermines those aspirations.
In the meantime the South African government should do everything in its power to retain skills in the country regardless of all else.
More wealth is created by a more skilled workforce which in turn is going to provide more employment to a better educated population.
Enlightened public policy is called for taking full account of time and circumstance despite wishful thinking.
Politically a hard act to balance - a very tough one indeed - but an inescapable challenge for responsible government.
It will be successful in the long-run.
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