“A young Black man goes into a company’s office,
clutching a Classified Ad from the ‘Jobs Vacant’ section of the local
newspaper. “I want to apply for this job,” he says. “Let’s check your
credentials before I tell you more about the job,” replies the man behind the
desk. “I gained a B Com degree three years ago, but I haven’t been able to find
work since I graduated, so I don’t have any experience.” The young man hands
over letters from his teachers and lecturers stating their assessment of his
capabilities and character. “That’s promising,” replies the man behind the desk.
“We’re looking for a qualified person to do this job. It pays well, but we don’t
do any work for the Government or the big companies that require that we comply
with the BBEEE requirements. We would love to do some of that, but we don’t think
it’s fair to our employees to subject them to arbitrary rules based on their
race, so we limit our market to companies that think the way we do. We appoint
people on merit, give them the training that they need to perform well, and
then promote them according to their ability to do the work. We’re just an
ordinary business that doesn’t apply any discriminatory rules based on race,
gender or religion. All we’re looking for is someone who wants to build a
long-term career on the basis of his or her ability.” The man behind the desk
named a salary that was a little above the average for the qualifications
required for the job. “Of course, in order to ensure that we keep the best
people, we provide full training for the job as well as the next one up on the
ladder, so that you can progress as quickly as your capabilities permit, and we’ll
offer a participation in the shareholding of the company to people who have been
with us for at least three years, and have proven their ability to perform in
the jobs they hold by scoring above average on their annual performance
appraisal. You can pay for your shareholding, if it’s offered, by deducting 1%
of your salary for the purpose, until the agreed cost is paid. The likelihood is
that the shares will earn you at least an additional fifty per cent of your
salary once they’ve been paid. We don’t believe that anyone is entitled to
demand a handout purely on the basis of their race, so your future will depend
on you. Are you interested in the job?”
The applicant sat back in the chair and considered what
he had been told. He needed the job, because the economy had been declining
steadily since before he had commenced his studies, stifled by the economic
policies imposed on the country by a Marxist-Leninist Government which appeared
to have little understanding of proven economic theory, and he doubted that any
of the many promises and job-creation initiatives by the Government would work
any better in the future than they had done in the past twenty-three years.
Please respond to this situation as though you were the
applicant by ticking one of the boxes below:

“Yes, please. I would like the job. I have always
wanted to earn what I am worth, and I resent being treated as someone who needs
special treatment. I believe that would degrade me personally as well as the
knowledge I have worked so hard to obtain. You can count on me as a future
shareholder.

No, thank you. I know that I do not have the skills,
knowledge and capabilities of a White person, and I am not prepared to
undertake any form of employment that does not recognise that my parents’
suffering under Apartheid entitles me to be paid for performing at a lower
level than a White person with the same level of education. I believe that I am
inferior, and I demand special rights to compensate for that.
Please amplify your choice in not more than 1 000
words below.”
*~*
No, this did not happen, but it
is a situation that comes up many times each day in South Africa.
The Government places much
emphasis on the creation of special entitlements for Black persons, and on the
creation of ‘Black entrepreneurs’, apparently believing that a job created by a
Black entrepreneur has more value than that created by a White. It does not
seem to understand that an employer seeking a new employee will take whichever
candidate meets its requirements in terms of education, experience and skills,
which implies that the major responsibility of the Government is the provision
of an education and training that will ensure that all of the people in the
system gain the qualifications to hold they jobs they aspire to. In none of the
companies assisted by the Management Consultancy of which I am part was race
ever a criterion, except where the employer was forced to accommodate a lower
level of capability in order to meet the requirements of the Government’s BBEEE
laws, and, in most cases, that resulted in a form of restructuring to ensure
that the candidate it was forced to take was supported by other employees with
more skill and experience. The Government fails to understand, or perhaps does
not wish to understand, that the world of business is focused on profit and
effectiveness in a world where both of these are becoming more critical each
month. They want to employ people who will enable them to achieve these goals,
and do not even notice the race of the person doing the job.
As in so many aspects of
Government’s actions, it appears that the insistence on employers choosing the
correct racial mix is doing much more to drag down the ability of companies to
do the work needed for the economy, than it is doing to advance the interests
of the Black population. The declining performance of the economy is stark
evidence of that. In the interests of advancing its prospects to be re-elected,
the ANC is creating racial division and strife, totally ignoring the fact that
the Government is the Government of ALL
the people of the country. One must ask why it is good to destroy the ability
of White-owned and –managed businesses to succeed and to continue to offer jobs
to all races, while providing huge incentives to Black-owned (and probably
White-managed) businesses to replace them, (probably at a lower level of
effectiveness for many years) introducing a large cost burden on Government and
continuity-risk burden on employees (in acknowledgement of the universal fact
that the highest fatality rate for business is experienced in the first three
to seven year period).
How would you respond to the
questions above, if you were in the position of the young Black job-seeker? Do
you qualify as a racist, or as an efficient player in the economy?
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