Latest from the IRR

Selfs armes is aandadig aan swak regering – Rapport, 19 July 2015

Magsbalanse, en nie rekonsiliasie nie, is nou die beste manier om ’n stabiele en voorspoedige toekoms vir ons land te verseker. Dit is frustrerend om te sien hoe sleg die privaat sektor, kommersiële boere, die middelklas en groot korporasies vaar met die versekering van ’n toekoms vir hulself in Suid-Afrika.

Time to halt BEE – BizNews, 29 June 2015

A comprehensive audit of black economic empowerment (BEE) ownership deals since 2001, recently compiled by Intellidex, a consultancy, shows that R317bn, free of debt, has been transferred to black South Africans by the top 100 companies listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE).

The IRR's 10-point plan for jobs

24 June 2015 – Job security for some has been achieved at the price of unemployment for others who might have benefited from a more adaptable and flexible regulatory environment.

Racism of “the worst order” in the BEE generic codes?

10 June 2015 – In an article published today in BizNews, the IRR points out that the Government seems to have quietly amended the BEE codes to discourage the appointment of Indian and so-called ‘coloured’ people to senior posts.

IRR warns on tourism industry/new travel regulations

21 May 2015 – The IRR has warned that onerous new travel regulations (specifically the requirement that children travel with an unabridged birth certificate) to be enforced by the Department of Home Affairs within the next month will harm South Africa's tourism industry.

Ignoring the writing on the wall – BizNews, 13 May 2015

A handful of Bills, either recently enacted or soon-to-be are floating through undiscussed, stipulating the chopping and changing ownership of long-held land as suits the government, not to mention the dabbling with mining regulations that puts the entire economy under threat. Time to wake up and join the conversation.

SA government doing more to hinder than to help

4 May 2015 – Contrary to what it claims, the Government is doing more to hinder than to help young people participate in the economy, says the South African Institute of Race Relations (IRR).

Jack and Jill went down the hill...

30 April 2015 – The IRR’s Fast Facts report published this week takes a glance at South Africa’s ‘born frees’, defined as people born in or after 1990. As the figures show, born frees have not been guaranteed free passage to prosperity by political freedom. The road to a better life is fraught with major hurdles, mainly poor education and high unemployment.

Born free but still in chains

29 April 2015 – Born frees, people born after 1990, will increasingly become more involved in violent protests, and abandon democratic institutions, due to ongoing political and economic alienation.

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