Swart ekonomiese bemagtiging (SEB) en regstellende aksie is bedrog wat teen die armes gepleeg word, en dit geniet baie min algemene ondersteuning onder gewone mense.
Our own writing in the media
The CEO of the Institute, John Kane-Berman, pays tribute to Lawrence Schlemmer. Professor Schlemmer was a top social scientist and researcher in South Africa and was a Vice-President of the Institute.
We have much experience of studying ANC policy documents and find the most recent set of nine documents interesting, in the sense that some of the more rabid Marxist dogma has been very clearly toned down, while flashes of economic common sense shine through here and there.
John Kane-Berman wrote a letter which appeared in Business Day stating that, "Views expressed by Prof Sipho Seepe in a series of columns in Business Day (most recently on May 6, Black man stating his opinion risks losing approval of whites) may have been assumed to be those of the South African Institute of Race Relations. Although Seepe is its president, many of his views are not those of the institute, which remains as strongly committed to the independence of the judiciary and the rule of law as it always has been."
In the hue and cry surrounding South Africa’s recent local government elections, few noticed that Julius Malema and his Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) are developing a do-it-yourself civilian crime-fighting strategy
Magsbalanse, en nie rekonsiliasie nie, is nou die beste manier om ’n stabiele en voorspoedige toekoms vir ons land te verseker. Dit is frustrerend om te sien hoe sleg die privaat sektor, kommersiële boere, die middelklas en groot korporasies vaar met die versekering van ’n toekoms vir hulself in Suid-Afrika.
Jobs and growth are coming back into focus and this opens the way for three policy reforms that will be necessary if the government is to meet its growth and employment targets
From this viewpoint, the defeat of the no-confidence motion is not a mark of Mr Zuma’s continued strength but rather a confirmation that the time for Mr Zuma’s departure – in the eyes of all those trying to keep the ANC in power in 2019 – is not yet ripe.
To learn that we are in such a state of criminality is very scary. We are in a crisis that needs urgent attention; not only from government, but also from we the citizens. That 51 people are murdered each day is something that ought to get us off our seats and act bold.
In his fortnightly column in Business Day, the Institute's CEO, John Kane-Berman, says that there are several signs that the ANC is afraid of opposition parties.
The Economist skryf onlangs dat die ANC se buitelandse beleid dui op mense wat “geen benul het nie”.
When it first came to fruition under Mandela’s South Africa, the equal opportunities act showed huge promise in rectifying inequalities perpetuated by the Apartheid government. Twenty odd years later, BEE has grown out of proportion and deviated from its original purpose – to empower those who were historically disadvantaged.
Metros work with private operators to deliver broadband, but law keeps provinces in the cold
Jobless youth are now routinely described as a "ticking time bomb", but the time bomb will have to explode before it is taken seriously enough to result in the policy changes.
Party kritici sê ons ontleding is verkeerd en daar word geen poging aangewend om Suid-Afrika na sosialisme te lei nie. Maar die huidige beleidsrigting is duidelik sosialisties van aard en word deur die toenemende invloed van die SAKP gedryf. 40% van die kabinet is inderdaad lede van dié party en nie een van hulle ontken dat ons ontleding reg is nie.
A furore broke out in March, when several LGBT Youtube vloggers and artists complained that their content is being censored by the video-sharing website’s restricted mode.
In his fortnightly column in Business Day, the Institute's CEO, John Kane-Berman, writes that despite the Government's warning that "social spending is not a substitute for job creation" the Government's policies are not conducive to growth or job creation.
Few of last week's numerous newspaper articles commemorating the tragic sinking of the SS Mendi off the English coastline near the Isle of Wight on 21st February 1917 failed to mention that the African servicemen who lost their lives in the First World War had been treated by the then government as second class
Comments by Frans Cronjé to the Trans-Atlantic Dialogue Programme of the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom in Brussels, September 3 2015.
10 January 2018 - Frans Cronje says the country, and business, needs to get out of the current ideological rut.