Black Industrialist Programme receives R30bn in pledges

Cape Town – Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies says the recently launched Black Industrialist Programme had already received pledges in excess of R30 billion from development finance institutions.

The Minister said this when he led a debate on President Jacob Zuma’s State of the Nation Address at the National Assembly, on Tuesday.

Minister Davies launched the forum, set up to oversee the applications for the black industrialist programme, in December.

“I am happy to indicate that we already have pledges of over R30 billion from institutions like the Land Bank, the Industrial Development Corporation, the Small Enterprise Finance Agency, the Development Bank of Southern Africa and some provincial organisations like the KwaZulu-Natal Growth Fund.

“We have already received applications and I am pleased to be able to say that the funding forum will hold its first meeting next month,” he said.

During his State of the Nation Address, President Zuma said economic transformation and black empowerment remained a key part of all economic programmes of government. 

He said one of government’s new interventions was the black industrialist scheme which had been launched to promote the participation of black entrepreneurs in manufacturing. 

The President urged big business to partner with the new manufacturers, including businesses owned by women and the youth, as part of broadening the ownership and control of the economy.

During the debate, Minister Davies said during the course of this year government would be introducing a new Industrial Policy Action Plan that would cover the actions of this year.

“The higher level of localisation has been achieved in a sense that we now have firms that would have supplied us with imports coming into South Africa investing and producing here.

“But we are not at a point in localisation where we have sufficient local companies, particularly companies that are owned by the majority of this country’s population, that are driving jobs.

“It is for that reason that we have launched a targeted black industrialist programme,” he said.  

Invest SA

Minister Davies said, meanwhile, that government had established Invest SA, a one-stop shop set up to remove bottlenecks to make it easier to do business.

“On investment, we have sought to improve our investment facilitation.

“This is a one-stop-shop that will include under it an intergovernmental clearing house of all the various agencies that are involved in taking regulatory decisions that will affect investment and this will be overseen by an inter-ministerial committee that is chaired by the president,” he said.