The performance of preferential procurement at the SABC
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Date
2017
Authors
Kaseke, Trevor Farayi
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Abstract
This study primarily sought to establish how a state owned entity, as an expected
enthusiastic proponent of the State’s black economic empowerment efforts, had
performed in terms of preferential procurement from majority black-owned
vendors. It also sought to find out to what extent, if any, the fortunes of majority
black-owned vendors had extended beyond the typical categories of catering
services, cleaning services and security services.
The study employed a mixed-methods approach, combining quantitative and
qualitative analysis. The basis of the quantitative analysis was procurementrelated
documents, while the basis of the qualitative analysis was interviews
conducted with personnel selected either for their involvement in the supply chain
management process, or were the users of services or products procured by the
South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) SOC Ltd. Descriptive statistics
were used to analyse the data.
While the full population of transactions and vendors used during the period of
analysis (2010 – 2015) was available, gaps in required information, as well as
some withheld information, presented a limitation in terms of the data that could
be used to answer the research questions. As a result of this limitation, the results
of this study are indicative and not definitive.
In terms of the primary research question the study found the bulk of procurement
having been placed through vendors within B-BBEE levels 1 to 4. There were also
significant increases in the proportion of procurement spend going to EMEs and
QSEs over the analysis period. In terms of making use of majority black-owned
vendors, there was a marked increase over the analysis period, with marked
increases in the use of majority black-owned EMEs and QSEs.
In terms of the sub-question, the study found a high proportion of spend, or
increasing proportions of spend, that went to vendors offering services and
products within the SABC’s core business areas such as Content Production. The qualitative interviews conducted revealed that this performance by the SABC
has largely been ‘accidental’. The SABC has no strategy for black economic
empowerment in general, and for preferential procurement or enterprise
development in particular.
All that the SABC appears to have done is implement a supply chain management
policy that is aligned with the government’s black economic empowerment
legislation and regulations. This particular finding appears to demonstrate how the
State’s policies and related pieces of regulation are intended to work. At the
barest minimum, just implementing internal policies aligned to the legislation and
regulations should go some way in achieving the national imperative of broadbased
black economic empowerment.
The report concludes with recommendations on how the analysis from this study
could be built on, as well as steps the SABC could take to improve its
performance in terms of preferential procurement and enterprise development.
Description
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Management,
University of the Witwatersrand, in 50% fulfilment of the requirement
for the degree of Master of Management (in the field of Monitoring and Evaluation), December 2017
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Citation
Kaseke, Trevor Farayi, (2017) The performance of preferential procurement at the SABC, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, https://hdl.handle.net/10539/28557