Type | Journal Article - Quarterly Competition Review |
Title | The black industrialists programme in context: the real barriers to entry |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
Page numbers | 2-4 |
Abstract | S outh Africa has one of the highest levels of income inequality in the world with a Gini coefficient that has remained around 0.65 over the past decade.1 In addition, South Africa’s unemployment rate, using the narrow definition, at 26.4% is very high. 2 Much of this has been attributed to the legacy of apartheid during which the majority of South Africans were economically marginalised with few economic opportunities. Efforts have been made to try to reduce this gap in access to economic opportunities through regulation such as the Broad -Based Black Economic Empowerment Act. The New Growth Path and the National Development Plan also provide a framework for increasing investment in industrial activity and highlight key constraints to inclusive growth in the South African economy.3 In May 2015, South Africa’s Minister of Economic Development Ebrahim Patel announced that R23 billion would be put aside over the next five years to support black industrialists in a strategy to increase investment and participation.4 While access to capital would be beneficial to increasing the participation of so-called black industrialists in the economy, a recent CCRED project on barriers to entry demonstrates that firms face more challenges than access to capital when attempting to enter an industry. By using case studies on the wholesale fuel sector and the entry of a new brand, Soweto Gold, into the beer industry, the studies show how structural and strategic barriers to entry could present an obstacle for entrant firms and ‘black industrialists’. This article highlights some of these findings. |
» | South Africa - Quarterly Labour Force Survey 2015 |