logo
McKinsey's compliance failure is a case study in corporate complicity

McKinsey's compliance failure is a case study in corporate complicity

Daily Maverick23-04-2025
The McKinsey case forces us to ask uncomfortable questions about the behaviour of multinationals operating in governance-compromised jurisdictions. It is easy for firms to speak the language of ethics and integrity from glass towers in New York or London. But it is at the coalface, when ethical decisions are inconvenient, risky, or expensive, that a company's real values are revealed.
McKinsey & Company's role in South Africa's State Capture saga is not just an ethical blemish on one of the world's most prestigious consultancies, it is a case study in how corporate compliance frameworks can be rendered toothless when commercial appetite trumps integrity.
Through its partnerships with Regiments Capital and later Trillian Capital Partners, entities with clear links to the Gupta family, McKinsey embedded itself in the machinery of corruption that drained South Africa's state-owned enterprises. These weren't passive associations. They were deliberate business relationships formed in the face of serious reputational and legal risk. Despite overwhelming indications that these local partners were part of a broader State Capture project, McKinsey pressed ahead. It did so not in ignorance, but in defiance of the red flags.
Compliance protocols failure
McKinsey's internal compliance protocols failed at every critical juncture. Due diligence processes that should have flagged conflicts and corruption risks were either poorly executed, overridden, or deliberately ignored. Even after internal concerns were raised, such as those relating to Trillian's ties to the Guptas, decision-makers within the firm did not intervene. In effect, the very systems designed to shield McKinsey from reputational and legal exposure were sidelined in service of short-term commercial gain.
This was not simply a local compliance failure; it was a global governance collapse. McKinsey's international leadership structures, including its global risk committees, knew, or should have known, about the risks associated with their South African operations. Yet the firm's internal architecture failed to act. That failure underscores a critical flaw in how compliance is often practiced: as a procedural façade, rather than a genuine organisational constraint.
What this tells us is that compliance frameworks cannot be assessed by their existence on paper. McKinsey had protocols. It had ethics officers. It had codes of conduct and formalised approval channels. But what it lacked, at least in this context, was a corporate culture that enabled those structures to interrupt profit-driven decision-making.
The uncomfortable questions
The McKinsey case forces us to ask uncomfortable questions about the behaviour of multinationals operating in governance-compromised jurisdictions. It is easy for firms to speak the language of ethics and integrity from glass towers in New York or London. But it is at the coalface, when ethical decisions are inconvenient, risky, or expensive, that a company's real values are revealed.
In contexts like South Africa, where public procurement systems are easily manipulated and political interference in state-owned entities is endemic, the burden on private firms to self-regulate is even higher. But McKinsey's conduct suggests the opposite: that weak institutional environments are treated not as compliance hazards, but as commercial opportunities.
The scandal also punctures the illusion that Environmental, Social and Governance commitments, particularly those relating to governance, present more than aspirational branding. McKinsey, like many global firms, has embraced Environmental, Social and Governance commitments in its external communications, claiming leadership in corporate integrity. But its actions in South Africa call that narrative into question.
'You cannot claim Environmental, Social and Governance leadership in your annual report while enabling corruption in your offshore operations.'
Investors and regulators are no longer satisfied with platitudes. They are asking whether companies are living their values, or merely marketing them.
The lessons
There are critical lessons to be learned.
First, compliance systems must be context-sensitive and embedded across global operations. What constitutes a red flag in Frankfurt may require entirely different scrutiny in Johannesburg.
Second, local compliance professionals must be empowered to veto or suspend deals, regardless of profitability. This requires not just technical capacity, but institutional support from leadership.
Third, accountability must flow upward. When compliance collapses, it should not be the middle managers or local partners who shoulder the blame, while senior leadership escapes scrutiny.
McKinsey's eventual apology and repayment of R870-million to Eskom, while necessary, does little to address the structural flaws that allowed this conduct to occur. Nor does it restore the trust lost by public institutions whose mandates were undermined by self-interested private actors. Restitution without reform is hollow.
If anything, the scandal should disabuse us of the idea that elite global firms are inherently ethical actors. Prestige does not equal integrity. And in weak governance environments, corporate opportunism will almost always fill the vacuum left by absent enforcement.
For McKinsey, the fallout has been a reputational reckoning. But for South Africa, it is a warning: as long as the compliance frameworks of international firms remain reactive, fragmented, and culturally disconnected from the realities on the ground, the private sector will continue to play a central role in enabling State Capture.
The regulatory response must be robust. South Africa needs stronger cross-border enforcement tools, tighter controls on public-private partnerships, and an empowered prosecutorial authority capable of holding both domestic and international actors accountable. But perhaps more urgently, the global legal and compliance community must recognise that 'doing business responsibly' in vulnerable states means more than following internal rules. It means refusing to participate, explicitly or implicitly, in systems that exploit institutional weakness for private gain. DM
Annerize Shaw (Kolbé) is a specialised attorney of the High Court of South Africa, an LL.M. candidate in Corporate and Commercial Law at the University of London, and a member of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, London. She is a published author in the field of international comparative law, with a focus on corporate compliance and legal sector transformation.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kenny Kunene still deputy president of Patriotic Alliance
Kenny Kunene still deputy president of Patriotic Alliance

The Citizen

time2 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Kenny Kunene still deputy president of Patriotic Alliance

Kunene resigned as a councillor in the City of Johannesburg over the weekend. The Patriotic Alliance (PA) says Kenny Kunene is still the deputy president of the party despite being suspended. Kunene resigned as a councillor in the City of Johannesburg, effective immediately, on Saturday. His resignation comes after the PA deputy leader was seen at the home of Katiso 'KT' Molefe, who has been arrested in connection with the murder of popular South African DJ Oupa John Sefoka, known as DJ Sumbody. PA position His presence at the scene raised eyebrows, prompting PA leader Gayton McKenzie to suspend him pending an investigation. PA spokesperson Steve Motale told The Citizen on Monday, Kunene retains his position in the party. 'Kenny Kunene remains Deputy President of the PA,' said Motale. ALSO READ: Joburg council has 'no jurisdiction over Kenny Kunene, it's a police matter,' Morero says [VIDEO] 'Police matter' Over the weekend, the City of Johannesburg Mayor Dada Morero claimed the City of Joburg council no longer has jurisdiction over the former transport MMC now that he has resigned, and that it has become a 'police matter.' 'Council works quite differently. He has resigned as a counsellor, meaning he's no longer part of the council, and the council, therefore, does not have jurisdiction over him in terms of our own code of conduct as councillors. 'It's a matter for the police and his party to investigate the matter of his being in the place of the guy who is alleged to have been involved in criminal activity. So it's not our matter, it's a police matter, and it's a matter of the party. He has given us a resignation, so the council has therefore officially released him as a councillor,' Morero said. 'Allegations unfounded' Kunene claims he was at Molefe's house to facilitate a meeting for a journalist from his online publication, Africa Global News, for a 'potential exclusive story'. Kunene insisted the allegations against him were 'unfounded' and said he is proud of the contributions he made during his time as councillor and MMC. DJ Sumbody was killed in Woodmead, Johannesburg, in a hail of bullets in the early hours of Sunday, 20 November 2022. ALSO READ: McKenzie suspends Kunene amid DJ Sumbody murder probe [VIDEO]

DJ Sumbody's murder exposes connection between crime and power
DJ Sumbody's murder exposes connection between crime and power

The Citizen

time2 hours ago

  • The Citizen

DJ Sumbody's murder exposes connection between crime and power

'The whole issue of killings of whistleblowers and assassinations generally is massively interlinked with procurement corruption.' DJ Sumbody at the Crypto Knight on 22 July 2022 in Midrand. Picture: Gallo Images/Oupa Bopape On a quiet November night in 2022, DJ Sumbody – a rising star in South Africa's music scene — was gunned down in a hail of bullets while heading home. Then, in April 2024, engineer Armand Swart was executed in a similar shooting after his company flagged a suspicious government tender in which prices had been inflated by over 4,500 percent. But dramatic arrests this week are tying those murders and many more together, exposing a murky underworld where criminals consort with political bigwigs for lucrative state tenders. The arrests came after explosive allegations by a senior police chief who accused the force and South Africa's police minister of a cover-up. ALSO READ: Malema accuses Kunene of lying about relationship with man accused of murdering DJ Sumbody Deep-rooted procurement corruption has seeped through every level of government for decades, security researcher David Bruce told AFP. 'The whole issue of killings of whistleblowers and assassinations generally is massively interlinked with that issue,' said Bruce, a consultant with the Institute for Security Studies. DJ Sumbody arrests Among those arrested this week are a former Johannesburg police officer at the time of DJ Sumbody's murder, as well as the prime suspect, a businessman named Katiso Molefe. British media have reported that a South African man of the same name and age as Molefe was sentenced to four years in prison in the United Kingdom in 2003 for drug trafficking. Two other men, already in custody for the 2023 attempted murder of former reality TV star turned influencer Tebogo Thobejane, are also believed to have played a role. It doesn't end there. ALSO READ: Firearms used in DJ Sumbody's murder linked to 10 other high-profile cases During the raid on Monday, police found prominent Johannesburg politician, Kenny Kunene, at Molefe's home. Kunene, a Johannesburg city council member, has since been suspended by his party leader, Sports Minister Gayton McKenzie, though police have not formally implicated him. Kunene denied any wrongdoing, saying he was merely trying to assist a journalist seeking to interview Molefe. 'Tenderpreneurs' At the centre of the widening web is businessman Vusimuzi 'Cat' Matlala, described locally as a 'tenderpreneur', a term referring to individuals who have made fortunes through government contracts. Also, the head of a private security firm, Matlala, was arrested in May in connection with the 2023 attempt on his ex-partner Thobejane's life. Thobejane, famous for her role in the long-running local soap opera Muvhango, denied having 'snitched' on Matlala earlier this month. 'I am a victim,' she told News24. In 2024, Matlala secured a $20 million contract with the national police — now cancelled — despite being implicated in a $125 million public hospital embezzlement scandal. ALSO READ: DJ Sumbody's family welcomes arrests of suspects, thank police The Tembisa hospital case cost whistleblower Babita Deokaran her life in 2021, when she was shot nine times outside her home. No arrests have been made in Deokaran's killing, reflecting the impunity that reigns, with only 11 percent of murders solved, according to 2024 police statistics. 'All these three cases are linked somehow,' police spokeswoman Athlenda Mathe said, referring to DJ Sumbody, Swart and Thobejane. Four weapons, including the AK-47 rifle used to kill DJ Sumbody, have been linked through ballistics to at least 10 high-profile cases, she added. Police minister accused The implications run deep. KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Commissioner Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi last month accused colleagues and Police Minister Senzo Mchunu of burying investigations targeting Matlala. In a bombshell televised press conference, flanked by armed security forces, Mkhwanazi alleged Mchunu had received payments from a corruption suspect and accused prosecutors of delaying justice. 'We do hope that pretty soon we might find some changes with good dedicated prosecutors and we might see arrests happening,' he said, adding that cases of murdered artists would finally 'come to the fore'. President Cyril Ramaphosa has since suspended Mchunu and announced a judicial inquiry into the allegations. But there has been no tangible action. ALSO READ: DJ Sumbody's friend, DJ Vettys in a 'stable condition' says manager, after being shot South Africa faces one of the world's highest murder rates, averaging more than 75 killings a day. Politically motivated contract killings have surged 108 percent over the past decade, according to a 2024 report by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organised Crime. Studies show hiring a contract killer can cost as little as $145 in a country all too accustomed to violence. 'It's easier to silence someone with a bullet than contend with an investigation,' said Chad Thomas, head of private investigation company IRS Forensic.

Who will steer the R55bn marriage of MultiChoice and Canal+?
Who will steer the R55bn marriage of MultiChoice and Canal+?

Daily Maverick

time11 hours ago

  • Daily Maverick

Who will steer the R55bn marriage of MultiChoice and Canal+?

There's a new power couple in African media. After nearly five years of courting, Canal+ has finally put a ring on MultiChoice to form a pan-African content colossus with global ambitions. French media titan Canal+ has secured the final go-ahead to acquire MultiChoice in a landmark R55-billion deal. After years of quiet manoeuvring and regulatory hurdles, the merger is now a question of who controls what. The Competition Tribunal's conditional approval, granted late last week, closes the chapter on a five-year 'creeping takeover' and opens a new era in African broadcasting. Now it's a balancing act weighing foreign capital with national sovereignty on a digital scale with local content. Enter the media monarchy In return for its princely sum, Canal+, owned by the French conglomerate Vivendi, gets access to MultiChoice's 14.5 million Anglophone and Lusophone subscribers, the DStv powerhouse, sports juggernaut SuperSport, and a foothold in streaming via Showmax. MultiChoice, facing rising costs and subscriber declines, finds itself rescued by a suitor with deep pockets and pan-African ambition. Combined, the merged entity will serve more than 24 million subscribers across 50 countries — instantly becoming the largest pay-TV and streaming provider on the continent. However, if Canal+ was hoping for free access, South African regulators had other plans. The deal's approval came wrapped in layers of red tape — not as a deterrent, but as a deliberate design feature. Transformation goals Central to the regulatory conditions is the creation of LicenceCo, an independent company that will hold MultiChoice South Africa's broadcast licence. It will be majority-owned and controlled by historically disadvantaged South Africans and employees. Crucially, Canal+ has no control and no board seats. This structural firewall protects South Africa's legal requirements around media ownership, ensures transformation goals are met and serves as a template for foreign investment in other sensitive sectors. Phuthuma Nathi, the B-BBEE shareholder darling, increases its economic interest in LicenceCo to 27%, with a new employee trust added. The licence, and the local airwaves it governs, stay South African. The R30bn lobola The Competition Tribunal didn't just demand structural separation; it also extracted a commitment package valued at more than R30-billion. This includes: A three-year moratorium on retrenchments linked to the merger; Significant investment in local content production, sports broadcasting, SMME procurement and Corporate Social Investment programmes; Ongoing free-to-air broadcast access for key sporting events, safeguarding the public's ability to view major matches without a subscription; and Local skills development through Canal+'s 'University Programme', to train historically disadvantaged individuals in broadcasting and production. In a media environment where Netflix and Amazon Prime are increasingly dominant, this local-first approach is designed to future-proof South African media. Showmax, SuperSport and scale Behind the regulatory muscle lies a clear commercial imperative. MultiChoice has struggled in recent years, shedding 2.8 million linear subscribers and burning cash to prop up Showmax 2.0, its streaming reboot built on Comcast tech and bolstered by NBC Universal's 30% equity stake. Canal+ brings financial stability and scale. It also inherits Irdeto, MultiChoice's profitable cybersecurity unit, and Showmax's potential to become Africa's answer to global streamers. Vivendi, Canal+'s parent company, views this merger as critical to its own transformation and part of a plan to split into three listed entities, with Canal+ as its global growth engine. Listing Canal+ on the JSE within nine months of deal completion is a further nod to local inclusion, visibility, and capital market confidence. The shiny ring can't cover controversial holes While South Africa celebrates a structurally sound deal with tangible local benefits, not all observers are convinced. Critics warn that Canal+'s track record and the Bolloré Group's 30.4% stake in it come with baggage. Vivendi's past includes one of the largest corporate losses in history and regulatory infractions that still cast a shadow. Vincent Bolloré, the billionaire behind the curtain, faces corruption charges in France and has been accused of turning Canal+'s French media outlets into right-wing political mouthpieces. With Canal+ now embedded in South Africa's broadcasting ecosystem, some fear creeping influence over editorial independence, particularly if there are future attempts to deepen ownership or control beyond the current firewall. Marriage isn't buying a horse Mergers are easy to announce but hard to manage. However, the competition bodies have played their hand cleverly — extracting commitments, safeguarding jobs and setting a precedent for how global capital must behave when it enters South Africa's strategic sectors. The long-term test lies ahead. Can Showmax truly compete with Netflix? Can SuperSport keep its sports crown as global streamers outbid for rights? Will LicenceCo be a transformative force or a regulatory box-ticker? Will Canal+ respect the firewall, or try to chip away at it over time? The merged entity is now king of the hill in African broadcasting, but it's a kingdom that won't run on size alone. Trust, execution and transformation will be the currencies of success. DM

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store