Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 30 January 2026
📘 Source: Club of Mozambique

South Africa’s government has proposed amending its flagship Black empowerment policy to allow white-owned companies to gain points by contributing to a controversial new 100 billion rand ($6.37 billion) fund for Black businesses. Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (B-BBEE) is the country’s signature mechanism for addressing the economic inequality that has persisted since the end of the racist apartheid system over three decades ago. But it has come under criticism from some at home.

President Donald Trump’s hostility to South Africa’s Black empowerment policies has helped fuel a diplomatic rift and may have contributed to Washington’s decision to impose heavy tariffs on its exports. The Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition announced the draft amendments on Thursday. They are open to public comment for 60 days before being finalised.

“The amendments are a commencement of a process that we are embarking on, which is the review of Transformation and B-BBEE policy,” said Minister Parks Tau. Controversial scorecard to right the wrongs of Apartheid The key change being proposed is the creation of a Transformation Fund, which businesses could pay into to earn points. This could allow them to improve their B-BBEE score without making changes to ownership or management, for example.

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The Transformation Fund would then help finance businesses run by Black entrepreneurs. President Cyril Ramaphosa and his African National Congress party maintain that the B-BBEE law is necessary to right the wrongs of white minority rule. The latest report of the government’s Commission for Employment Equity found that white people made up 61% of top management posts in 2024, while they are only 7% of the population. But the B-BBEE scheme has long been hotly contested in South Africa, with critics saying it has been misused to enrich a politically connected few and failed to reduce inequality.

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by Club of Mozambique • January 30, 2026

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