logo
Turning declarations into deliverables: South Africa's BRICS 2025 Challenge

Turning declarations into deliverables: South Africa's BRICS 2025 Challenge

IOL Newsa day ago
For South Africa, the BRICS 2030 horizon offers not just hope, but a promising future, writes Ayanda Holo.
Image: IOL / AI
By Ayanda Holo
Beneath the glittering chandeliers of the Bank of China building in Johannesburg, Chinese Ambassador Wu Peng addressed a gathering of investors, policymakers, and technocrats.
At his side sat South Africa's Deputy Finance Minister Dr David Masondo, a key architect of the government's economic recovery and structural reform agenda.
The occasion marked the release of the Chinese Investor Survey, a moment that revealed not only the depth of Sino-South African relations but also the lingering bottlenecks that continue to hinder what could be a transformative partnership.
Ambassador Wu's tone was both celebratory and cautionary. Over 200 Chinese enterprises have injected more than $11 billion into South Africa, creating jobs, taxes, and valuable industrialisation footprints.
Yet, despite this progress, the Ambassador pointedly highlighted recurring frustrations: the slow and sometimes opaque processing of work visas for essential engineers and managers and the heightened security threats to Chinese nationals. These issues, he suggested, could jeopardise investor confidence unless addressed with urgency and sincerity.
At the heart of his speech was a subtle but potent reference to Declaration 42 of the BRICS 2025 Strategy, which states:
"We welcome the results of the Strategy for BRICS Economic Partnership 2025… and look forward to the conclusion and implementation of the Strategy for BRICS Economic Partnership 2030, which will… guide cooperation on issues relating to the Multilateral Trading System, Digital Economy, International Trade, Financial Cooperation and Sustainable Development." This strategy is not just a document, but a roadmap to our future.
This forward-looking blueprint aims to deepen the ties that bind BRICS nations, with South Africa poised to benefit as a regional gateway for Asia–Africa trade. But such ambitions rest precariously on domestic execution.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Ad loading
The Visa Conundrum: When Policy Fails Practice
A compelling case in point emerged from a significant $200 million investment project in the Eastern Cape, a region with great potential for economic growth. The project procured high-grade industrial equipment from Yangzhou Metal Forming Machine Tool Co. The firm dispatched three highly skilled engineers to oversee installation and training. Despite submitting complete documentation to VFS Global, including verified invitation letters from their South African host, the engineers were denied work visas for several months.
This delay was not only an administrative embarrassment but also a tangible blow to investor confidence. The engineers were essential to commissioning a production line that was central to the project's ROI timeline. The months-long delay undermined the "open the way" vision of Operation Vulindlela, a flagship reform programme by the South African Presidency and Treasury designed to reduce red tape for investors.
Is Operation Vulindlela truly living up to its name?
According to a recent SA Government News release dated March 2025, the Department of Home Affairs has introduced improvements to fast-track visa applications for investors and critical skills workers. A new "Trusted Employer Scheme" was also piloted with large multinationals and BRICS-partner firms in mind. Yet the Eastern Cape incident underscores a gap between policy and implementation, a chasm where projects stall, costs rise, and goodwill wanes.
From Zero-Tariffs to Zero-Tolerance on Inefficiency
China's recent announcement to provide zero-tariff treatment to 53 African countries via the Framework Agreement on Economic Partnership for Shared Development is a tectonic shift in global trade patterns. It gives African manufacturers and agricultural producers unprecedented access to the world's second-largest economy. And South Africa, with its mature logistics, industrial base, and financial institutions, is uniquely positioned to lead this integration.
But it must not allow procedural inertia to squander strategic advantages.
This is particularly critical in sectors like automotive components, green energy infrastructure, and advanced manufacturing, where Chinese investment has surged. Each of these sectors requires the temporary importation of technical personnel, often on tight deadlines to transfer knowledge and integrate systems.
Ambassador Wu's call for smoother visa processes is therefore not a favour to China, but a necessary step if South Africa is serious about its BRICS role. It's not just about accommodating Chinese investors, but about creating an environment where all BRICS nations can thrive, boosting South Africa's economy and global influence.
A Catalogue of Cooperation
It is worth reminding readers of the many bilateral and multilateral agreements that underpin this evolving relationship. These include:
The China-South Africa Comprehensive Strategic Partnership Agreement (2010).The FOCAC Beijing Action Plan 2019–2025
The Belt and Road MOU, signed in 2015, focuses on infrastructure connectivity.Bilateral Investment Treaties and Double Taxation Agreements, protecting investor rights
The Annual SA-China High-Level People-to-People Exchange Mechanism, encouraging cultural, academic, and tech innovation links.
Each of these frameworks, including the 2025 BRICS Economic Strategy, calls for the removal of administrative and logistical barriers that impede the flow of capital, of people, of ideas.
What Must Change?
If Pretoria is to maintain credibility within BRICS and its reform agenda, several actions are urgent: Mandate real-time escalation channels for work visa cases tied to investment projects over R50 million.Expand and enforce the Trusted Employer Scheme beyond pilot status.
Include a BRICS Investor Fast Lane under the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition (DTIC).Publish quarterly Operation Vulindlela scorecards, with measurable impact on investor facilitation.
As Ambassador Wu concluded, "Challenges are part of development." But challenges left unaddressed become liabilities. For South Africa, the BRICS 2030 horizon offers not just hope, but a promising future. Whether that promise becomes reality depends not on declarations from abroad, but on decisions made at home.
* Ayanda Holo is the President of TV BRICS AFRICA
** The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of IOL or Independent Media.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Central African Republic delays election for the 6th time since 2022
Central African Republic delays election for the 6th time since 2022

The South African

time2 hours ago

  • The South African

Central African Republic delays election for the 6th time since 2022

The Central African Republic (CAR) has postponed its August 2025 local elections to December, causing ongoing tensions, opposition boycott calls, and deepening mistrust in the electoral process. At a meeting of the Strategic Committee on 11 July 2025, Prime Minister Félix Moloua confirmed the postponement. Furthermore, the presidential and parliamentary votes scheduled for December 2025 will now coincide with the elections. The Central African Republic has not held a local election since 1988, and multiple postponements have occurred since 2022. The National Elections Authority (ANE) brought up issues with technology and budget deficits. ANE failed to finish the electoral register by the 29 May 2025 deadline. The administration was unable to gather the electorate by the decree's deadline of 4 June 2025. A United Nations (UN) expert, Yao Agbetse, expressed concern about serious issues impacting ANE operations. In addition, election funding only covers local elections; it does not cover the costs of presidential and legislative campaigns. Furthermore, staff deployment inaccuracy and contracting delays have seriously hampered the preparations. The opposition alliance, BRDC (Republican Bloc for the Defence of the Constitution), has suggested talks with President Touadéra and called for a comprehensive overhaul of the electoral authority. To increase transparency, Touadéra started biometric voter registration in 2024. UN experts and Security Council briefings indicate calls for 'urgent institutional reform' and improved preparations ahead of elections planned for December 2025. As of mid-2025, several registration centres had remained closed due to insecurity, and the electoral register had not been finalised in multiple prefectures, according to UN expert Yao Agbetse. The BRDC criticised ANE, questioning its ability to manage the electoral process and calling for its restructuring. The rebel leaders Ali Darass and Sembe Bobo formally dissolved their armed factions on 10 July 2025. They pledged to promote reconciliation during a ceremony officiated by President Touadéra. According to the UN, elections are crucial to preserving peace and establishing a democratic government. The Central African Republic continues to rank among the world's poorest nations despite its wealth of mineral resources. It is recommended that international partners increase their backing for reliable electoral procedures. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 11. Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

Five key benefits of AI for women in business
Five key benefits of AI for women in business

The Citizen

time3 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Five key benefits of AI for women in business

AI can help close longstanding gaps in access to resources and information, empowering women to compete in male-dominated sectors. Artificial Intelligence (AI) has reshaped the way people live, work and interact with the world – from managing everyday tasks to revolutionising industries such as healthcare, finance and marketing. For women entrepreneurs, in particular, the rise of AI opens up exciting new possibilities. It offers smart, accessible tools that can help streamline operations, enhance customer engagement and make data-driven decisions with greater ease. AI can help close longstanding gaps in access to resources and information, empowering women to compete more fairly in male-dominated sectors. Nicole Sykes, National Head, Women in Business at FNB, unpacks five benefits that can support women in business and complement technological advancement to foster a more inclusive and dynamic business environment. ALSO READ: Hidden dangers of increasingly advanced AI assistants Enhanced decision-making She says AI-powered analytics tools can provide women entrepreneurs with valuable insights into market trends, customer behaviour and business performance. By analysing large sets of data, AI can help identify patterns and forecast future trends, enabling business owners to make informed decisions that drive strategic growth. 'For instance, AI can analyse sales data to predict inventory needs or assess the effectiveness of marketing campaigns.' Personalised customer experience Sykes adds that AI can enhance customer interactions through chatbots and virtual assistants that offer 24/7 support. 'These tools can handle routine inquiries, schedule appointments, and provide personalised recommendations based on customer data. This level of personalisation helps build stronger relationships with clients and improves customer satisfaction, which is crucial for business success.' ALSO READ: Will AI replace your psychologist? Operational efficiency 'Automating routine tasks with AI can free up valuable time for women entrepreneurs to focus on strategic aspects of their business,' says Sykes. From automating financial processes like invoicing and payroll to managing supply chains and inventory, AI can streamline operations and reduce administrative burdens. 'This increased efficiency can be particularly beneficial for small to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) with limited resources.' Marketing and sales optimisation She emphasises that AI-driven marketing tools can help women entrepreneurs create targeted advertising campaigns and analyse their effectiveness. 'AI algorithms can segment audiences based on various factors such as behaviour and demographics, allowing for more precise and cost-effective marketing strategies. Additionally, AI can assist in A/B testing, optimising email marketing, and predicting customer churn.' Financial management Sykes adds that AI can play a significant role in financial management by providing real-time insights into cash flow, expenses, and investment opportunities. AI-based financial tools can help with budgeting, forecasting and identifying potential financial risks. 'These insights empower women entrepreneurs to manage their finances more effectively and make data-driven financial decisions.' NOW READ: 'AI already reshaping traditional job functions,' says Microsoft SA

How much is Minister Senzo Mchunu earning during leave of absence?
How much is Minister Senzo Mchunu earning during leave of absence?

The South African

time3 hours ago

  • The South African

How much is Minister Senzo Mchunu earning during leave of absence?

Minister of Police Senzo Mchunu has been placed on leave of absence pending a judicial commission of inquiry, as ordered by President Cyril Ramaphosa. For public servants, this often equates to paid leave.. Mchunu's leave comes a week after KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi made bombshell allegations of underworld dealings about the minister. During a 'family meeting' briefing on Sunday evening, President Cyril Ramaphosa announced that he had placed Minister Senzo Mchunu of a leave of absence. This minister would remain on leave for the duration of judicial commission of inquiry. The commission would be pending an 'urgent and comprehensive investigation' on Mkhwanazi's criminal allegations. Despite outlining the lengthy process, which could take several months, Ramaphosa claimed that the commission would be attended to with 'necessary urgency and thoroughness'. After its investigation, the commission would submit a final report to the president, who would also expect an interim report after three and six months. Cyril Ramaphosa and Senzo Mchunu. Image: GCIS In the interim, Wits Professor Firoz Cachalia would officially be appointed acting Minister of Police at the end of July. According to reports, ministers in South Africa over R2.6 million per annum, pending a 2.5% increase. Public servants, like Senzo Mchunu, receive their full salary during their leave of absence. In addition to his salary, Senzo Mchunu would likely benefit from other perks of being in office. This includes: Free water, electricity, and generators Living in a state-owned residence, which includes domestic help Luxury car allowance for professional and private use private use First-class flights for official trips and economy flights for family members Hotel accommodation and catering when on official business VIP protection, including blue-light brigades 'Out-of-pocket expenses' Minister Senzo Mchunu issued a statement following President Ramaphosa's address. He shared: 'I welcome and respect the President's decision and pledge my commitment to the process. Honour and integrity are the virtues I personally subscribe to and which we all need to make efforts to uphold. 'I stand ready to respond to the accusations against me and account to the citizens of the Republic, fully and honestly so.' Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 . Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp , Facebook , X, and Bluesky for the latest news.

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