The State of BEE
Much has happened in the BEE arena in the past weeks, as well as the country.
Where is BEE going?
Many people have asked me this question in the past two weeks.
We do not see the B-BBEE act being rescinded when a new president takes
office. We do see the codes of
good practice being adjusted over time, but not immediately, and not
significantly. We do see the codes eventually being reconciled with
other transformation efforts, e.g. the PPPFA, the mining act etc, but
we do not see that “BEE will go away”. I expect and hope that more
emphasis will be placed on job creation, enterprise development and
skills development.
Financial Services Charter
Financial Services Charter (FSC) had a self-imposed deadline
of completing the process by 31st August 2008. This was missed -
although in reality the dti BEE codes does not have this deadline. At
the very best the FSC could have had a draft ready for gazetting, but
this would not have been finalised, so their own deadline was
unachievable. The private agreement that the dti had with the FSC, that
originally had no legal force, expired on 31st August and therefore is
null and void.
What it does mean is still to date no charters have been
gazetted. The tourism charter has progressed furthest, but is still not
finalised. In the meantime, every/any entity that needs to follow BEE
can only follow the Codes of Good Practice.
Accreditation of Verification Agencies
SANAS (SA National Accreditation System) has put an indefinite
hold on accreditation. There are still no accredited verification
agencies. ABVA (Association of BEE Verification Agencies), an industry
body representing prospective verification agencies is understandably
concerned as it could impact on the profitability of their members.
There has even been a bit of a public argument between ABVA and the dti
over ABVA using the dti name in its advertising.
We believe the reason for the delay has less to do with ABVA and
more with the interpretation of the codes. SANAS is intending
accrediting agencies based on an ISO standard (17011). ISO requires
some form of definite answer to questions, and the codes themselves are
still very open to interpretation.
There are many areas of controversy,
and until they can be solved, it would make sense for ISO to refuse
accreditation:
-
The on-going issue of self-assessment vs independent assessment vs ABVA members
-
The detail of evidence required for assessment
-
Specific interpretations: for example:
- Adjustment for gender – see our article on why we believe most agencies are getting it wrong
- Procurement: What is included and what is excluded?
- Some consultants believe that spend on TELKOM is
excluded, while others include TELKOM as both a 50% black owned and 30%
black women owned company
- The jury is still out on whether spend on local
authorities is included or not – rates/taxes are excluded, but the
debate is around water and electricity, even though clause 6.2.1 seems
to apply
- ESKOM – is it an organ of state or public entity that enjoys a statutory or regulated monopoly?
Until there is clarity and consensus and an independent
resolution body, I suspect that SANAS will not be able to accredit any
organisation.
The dti has published its methodology guidelines to
verification which does help, but it too has a long way to go to meet
full ISO standards.
What to do in the meantime?
Continue with your BEE journey. Continue to find out as much as possible about BEE and how it affects your business.
Continue to produce a scorecard. Continue to improve your score.
BEE Procurement and Enterprise Development
We had a positive response to our recent BEE Procurement and Enterprise
Development Conference. The delegates left with more information than
they could have imagined.
Due to demand we are pleased to announce that we will be hosting an overflow BEE Procurement and Enterprise Development event - 16 October
2008, only in Johannesburg. Don't miss out a second time and book early, space is limited. |