Duma Gqubule
Duma Gqubule is a financial journalist, analyst, researcher and adviser on issues of economic development and transformation
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/ 12 July 2005

The Vuyo Jack codes

Over the past decade there have been 1 127 publicly announced black economic empowerment deals worth R232,6-billion, according to Ernst & Young. At the end of May, the JSE Securities Exchange had a market capitalisation of R2 800-billion. The black equity in the above companies is 0,36% of the market total. It can safely be assumed that the total is less than 1% of the JSE’s market capitalisation.

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/ 20 July 2004

How to plug the pension fund hole in treasury

If growth in the assets of the Public Investment Commissioners, which manages public sector pension funds, continues at more than 16,5% a year, it will completely dominate the South African economy in the next 12 years, to the detriment of social spending. ”If growth is to be halted, there are a number of options,” says Gavan Duffy of the Alternative Information and Development Centre.

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/ 15 July 2004

Pension fund hole in treasury

The Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) is heading for a major showdown with the government over Minister of Finance Trevor Manuel’s plans to corporatise the Public Investment Commissioners (PIC), which manages public sector pension funds worth more than R300-billion. Government is running up the national debt to keep up its payments into the state pension fund.

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/ 28 May 2004

Inflation nutters’ view of the world

The government’s paranoid, hysterical and nit-picking response to the recent United Nations Development Programme South Africa Human Development Report 2003 has shown that it does not have a single coherent proposal on what should be done to significantly increase the country’s miserable rate of economic growth, writes Duma Gqubule.