JOHANNESBURG – Business Leadership South Africa (BLSA) chief executive, Bonang Mohale, revealed on Monday that business had contributed R1.9 trillion to the country’s GDP, employing seven times more people than government.
“We are saying business is the answer, not the enemy. Business is going to play its goal irrespective of assistance of government and create jobs,” Mohale said during a media briefing at BLSA offices in Johannesburg.
The report, undertaken by economic consultancy firm Quantec Research, showed that BLSA members employed 1.29 million people, with another 1.97 million jobs supported in the supply chain, while 596 719 people were dependent on BLSA employers. The study was commissioned earlier this year by BLSA to better understand the national footprint of its members.
BLSA is an independent association whose members include the leaders of some of South Africa’s biggest and most well-known businesses in various sectors such as Alexander Forbes, Anglo America Plc, Barclays Africa, British American Tobacco, Discovery, Deloitte, Murray and Roberts and many others.
“The 57 member companies in the study contribute 23.5% of total private sector employment, and pay full-time and part-time employees just under R2 trillion,” Mohale said.
He added that the economic growth in 2017 was projected to be not enough to absorb the mass number of graduates coming out of the country’s universities.
“If each of our members took 10 or more graduates, it could go a long way.”
Mohale emphasised that business was the most significant contributor to the country’s economy.
He added that the report was a result of public narratives that business was not playing its role in the economy.
The 57 companies that were used to conduct the research included Standard Bank, Anglo American and Hollard. In total BLSA has 80 CEOs as members, while Eskom, KPMG and Transnet were suspended.
“Business is a key contributor to South Africa’s GDP. BLSA members contributed roughly 36% of the total South African domestic economy’s output in 2016, compared to government’s 11.7%, while contributing 34% of the country’s GDP,” Mohale said.
“All our problems as South Africans are self-inflicted and are easily solvable if we work together.”
Quantec Research said: “It is clear from our footprint analysis that BLSA members play a significant and vital part in South Africa’s economy. The contribution of private sector entities is an essential component of economic activity in the country and through this contribution plays an important role in the provision of sustainable and inclusive economic growth.”