Tag Archive for: South African Economy

When South African President Cyril Ramaphosa delivered his maiden State of the Nation Address in mid-February, he promised to announce plans for a major investment conference.

On Monday evening, before flying out of OR Tambo International Airport to a Commonwealth heads of government meeting, Ramaphosa announced that the conference would take place in August or September.

“New investment in productive sectors of the economy is […] vital to our efforts to reduce poverty and inequality,” he said.

The president also announced the names of five people – four special envoys and one new economic adviser – tasked with seeking out and meeting with investors before the conference kicks off.

“They will be travelling to major financial centres in Asia, Middle East, Europe and the Americas to meet with potential investors,” said Ramaphosa. “A major part of their responsibility will be to seek out investors in other parts of Africa, from Nairobi to Lagos and from Dakar to Cairo.

“This is part of a broader push by government to advance economic integration in the Southern African region and across the continent.”

Meet the team:

Trevor Manuel

When images surfaced of Trevor Manuel and Cyril Ramaphosa jogging on the Sea Point Promenade in Cape Town shortly after Ramaphosa’s election as president, there was some speculation that Manuel could return to his post as finance minister. In the end Nhlanhla Nene was offered the job.

Manuel had said as early as March 2017 that he would be willing to advise a Ramaphosa-led government.

Almost a year later, he was named as one of Ramaphosa’s four investment envoys.

Manuel holds the distinction of being South Africa’s longest-serving post-apartheid era finance minister. He took over from Chris Liebenberg in 1996 and served as finance minister in the Cabinets of Nelson Mandela, Thabo Mbeki and Kgalema Motlanthe.

Ramaphosa will expect Manuel, who is respected by international investors, to bring the gravitas the country’s team of investment envoys needs to convince investors that South Africa under Ramaphosa is an attractive investment destination.

Mcebisi Jonas

While speculation over Manuel’s return to Cabinet never really got off the ground, Mcebisi Jonas was seen as a serious contender to replace Malusi Gigaba in Ramaphosa’s first Cabinet as finance minister.

He served as deputy finance minister from mid-2014 to early 2017, before being shuffled out of Cabinet in late March of that year. Jonas resigned as an ANC MP a few weeks later.

While still in office he became known as a fierce critic of state capture, arguing that it undermines the efficiency of the state.

He became one of the highest profile South Africans to make corruption allegations against the Gupta family. He told former Public Protector Thuli Madonsela that in 2015 – when he was still deputy finance minister – he was “offered” the job of finance minister and R600m by the Guptas. He turned it down.

The Gupta family has denied that such a meeting and the offer of money took place. Ajay Gupta in the past called the claim “blatantly dishonest”.

Ramaphosa will be hoping that Jonas’s persona as an enemy of corruption and sleaze will reassure investors that SA Inc has turned a page on the Zuma era.

Phumzile Langeni

Businesswoman Phumzile Langeni is the executive chairperson of the Afropulse Group, and has served on the boards of several major South African corporations, giving her a broad overview of the local economic landscape.

These include Imperial Holdings, Massmart, the Mineworkers Investment Company, Primedia, Transaction Capital, and more than a dozen others.

If Jonas and Manuel bring public sector experience to the team, Langeni and former Standard Bank chief Jacko Maree represent private sector knowledge.

According to her profile on Bloomberg, Langeni has also had some experience in government, having served as an economic adviser to former minister of minerals and energy Buyelwa Sonjica.

She holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Natal and is also a registered stockbroker, having completed a JSE stockbroking course at the University of the Witwatersrand in the mid-1990s.

Trudi Makhaya

Trudi Makhaya, the CEO of Makhaya Advisory and a former deputy commissioner at the Competition Commission, was named Ramaphosa’s economic adviser on Monday evening.

One of her first orders of business will be to coordinate the plans of the four special envoys, and create buzz at investment gatherings ahead of the main investment summit set to take place in South Africa before the end of September.

A Rhodes scholar, she has postgraduate degrees in business and economics from Oxford University and the University of the Witwatersrand.

According to her website, she has held management or consulting roles at Deloitte South Africa, Genesis Analytics and AngloGold Ashanti.

She has also served as an adviser and angel investor to a number of companies, and has held non-executive directorships at Vumelana Advisory Fund and MTN South Africa.

Makhaya is also an opinion columnist for Business Day, and her byline has appeared in numerous publications.

Jacko Maree

Maree retired as the CEO of Standard Bank in March 2013, after more than a decade in the role.

After stepping down, he stayed on at the group as a senior banker focusing on key client relationships.

He was later appointed co-deputy chairperson of the Standard Bank Group in 2016, and is currently the chairperson of Liberty Holdings Limited and Liberty Group Limited.

Ramaphosa will be hoping that Maree’s experience in doing business overseas and building relationships with clients will stand him in good stead when he woos foreign investors.

 

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, and Remuneration needs, email marketing@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

Sources: Jan Cronje (Fin24) [1]. Image sources: [1], Gobierno de Chile [2].

President Cyril Ramaphosa announced on Monday evening that South Africa would host a major investment conference in August or September 2018, which would aim to raise over R1trn in new investments over five years.

“The investment conference, which will involve domestic and international investors in equal measure, is not intended merely as a forum to discuss the investment climate,” said Ramaphosa, according to his prepared notes.

He was speaking at OR Tambo International Airport, before leaving for a Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in London.

“Rather, we expect the conference to report on actual investment deals that have been concluded and to provide a platform for would-be investors to seek out opportunities in the South African market. We are determined that the conference produce results that can be quantified and quickly realised.”

Ramaphosa said government hopes that the conference would generate at least $100bn – or about R1.2trn -in new investments over the next five years.

“Given the current rates of investment, this is an ambitious but realisable target that will provide a significant boost to our economy.”

Special envoys

Ramaphosa also unveiled the names of four ‘special envoys on investment’, who he said would spend the next few months engaging both domestic and foreign investors around economic opportunities in SA.

They are former minister of finance Trevor Manuel, former deputy minister of finance Mcebisi Jonas, executive chair of the Afropulse Group Phumzile Langeni, and chair of the Liberty Group and former Standard Bank head Jacko Maree.

“They will be travelling to major financial centres in Asia, Middle East, Europe and the Americas to meet with potential investors. A major part of their responsibility will be to seek out investors in other parts of Africa, from Nairobi to Lagos and from Dakar to Cairo,” he said.

The president also named businesswoman Trudi Makhaya as his economic adviser. Makhaya holds a number of degrees in business and economics, including from Oxford University and the University of the Witwatersrand.

Ramaphosa said that Makhaya would coordinate the work of the four special envoys and organise a series of investment roadshows in preparation for the conference.

According to Makhaya’s website, she has served as an adviser and angel investor to a number of companies, and has held non-executive directorships at Vumelana Advisory Fund and MTN South Africa.

She has also held management or consulting roles at Deloitte South Africa, Genesis Analytics, AngloGold Ashanti and the Competition Commission.

 

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, and Remuneration needs, email marketing@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

Sources: Jan Cronje (Fin24) [1].

If last week’s World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, is anything to go by, South Africans have a little bit more to be positive about heading into 2018.

Cyril Ramaphosa, the recently-elected President of the country’s ruling ANC, represented South Africa at the Forum, and presented a much more optimistic outlook than citizens have become accustomed to over the past few years.

Over the 4 days, Ramaphosa had an opportunity to engage with politicians and global business leaders, and present the case for forming partnerships with South Africa going forward. And he seized it.

Ramaphosa conveyed the sense that the country’s future is strong, with his focus being on unity, wise budgeting, and ridding the country of the corruption that has plagued it for so many years.

As a result, the nation’s credit rating is less likely to be lowered, and the rand has been trading stronger than usual, pushing past R12.00 to the dollar in the middle of last week, for the first time since May 2015 (although this is in part due to the weaker dollar).

The new ANC leadership has a chance to implement bold changes to the way South Africa is managed heading towards the 2019 general elections. These will, if Ramaphosa’s performance and outlook thus far are indications of what is to come, be for the betterment of all South Africans, and a very welcome shift in direction.

 

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, and Remuneration needs, email marketing@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

Source: [1]. Image source: [1].