Polling shows that most South Africans do not believe that soft Apartheid-style race-based policy such as BEE is the best way to improve their lives.
Most people believe that more jobs and better education rather than more BEE – best described as ‘Blatant Elite Enrichment’ – is the answer.
If South Africa is to address widespread poverty and deficiencies in critical areas such as education – which deepen rather than relieve disadvantage in society – it must jettison BEE and scrap race as a proxy for disadvantage, and adopt more effective measures that address the actual problems that are holding millions of South Africans back.
Polling conducted for the Racism is NOT the problem initiative shows that most South Africans have scant faith in BEE.
The data shows that:
Instead of clinging on to failing race-based policies such as BEE, South Africa should shift its focus to a policy of Economic Empowerment for the Disadvantaged (EED). Rather than using race a proxy for disadvantage, EED would determine disadvantage through a means test similar to that used for dispensing social grants, thus ensuring help for those needing it, rather than perpetually enriching greedy politicians and their associates who are the main beneficiaries of BEE.
Says Gabriel Crouse, Head of Campaigns at the Institute of Race Relations (IRR): “The primary problem with BEE is not who it appoints, but how it appoints. It relies on a twin absurdity; that adult children of black billionaires are considered ‘disadvantaged’, and that the value of work is your appearance, not what you do. This creates the incentive to pose rather than produce.”
Crouse continues: “Most people know racism is not the problem and that ‘Blatant Elite Enrichment’ is not the solution. But our billionaire president’s BEE-forever policy will not change unless people publicly assert what they are already saying privately to grass-roots surveyors.”
If you would like to know more about the new Racism is NOT the problem initiative, go to: https://racismisnottheproblem.co.za/
Media contacts: Gabriel Crouse, IRR Head of Campaigns – 082 510 0360; gabriel@irr.org.za
Duwayne Esau, IRR Campaign Officer – 081 700 0302; duwayne@irr.org.za
Media enquiries: Michael Morris Tel: 066 302 1968 Email: michael@irr.org.za
Kelebogile Leepile Tel: 079 051 0073 Email: kelebogile@irr.org.za