Revised B-BBEE Codes have serious implications for business

14th October 2013

On 11 October 2013, the revised Broad-based Black Economic Empowerment (B-BBEE) Codes of Good Practice were released by the Minister of Trade and Industry. The codes signal major changes for the B-BBEE environment in South Africa, making compliance easier for some companies, and more difficult for others.

The codes are effective immediately, although entities may elect to use the previous regulations for a period of one year.

“The revised codes reduce the number of elements from seven to five, with three of these elevated to priority element status,” says Roger Latchman, chief executive officer of the B-BBEE compliance consultants, VeriFi BEE Compliance. “The new priority elements include ownership, skills development, and enterprise and supplier development. All entities will need to comply with all five elements, although qualifying small enterprises (QSEs) only have to comply with ownership and any one of the other two priority elements. The priority elements require that a 40% minimum of the targets be achieved, failing which, entities will suffer a one-level drop in their B-BBEE compliance scorecard.”

Some other major changes to the codes include:

“In essence, the revised codes will require many entities to reconsider their B-BBEE strategy, ensuring that they meet the requirements necessary to achieve a sustainable compliance level,” says Latchman. “It is essential that entities begin their planning processes early, otherwise they may fall flat when they undergo their verification process.”

It is also important to consider whether previously concluded empowerment deals need to be restructured or refinanced, as the revised codes are applicable retrospectively to existing B-BBEE deals.

Latchman urges companies reliant on their B-BBEE scorecard to reassess their current ownership structure by assessing the following criteria:

Roger Latchman, CEO, VeriFi BEE Compliance