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The Insourcing Bill: Strengthening state capacity and protecting workers’ rights - Cosatu

The Mercury

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March 09, 2026

PARLIAMENT held an important hearing on the Insourcing Bill this past week. This Bill provides the nation with the unique opportunity to address a key ingredient that has fueled state capture and corruption, the hollowing out of the state and the suppression of vulnerable workers' rights since the advent of democracy in 1994.

- Solly Phetoe

The Insourcing Bill: Strengthening state capacity and protecting workers’ rights - Cosatu

PARLIAMENT held an important hearing on the Insourcing Bill this past week.

(AI LAB)

The Bill has been tabled against a background of a nation grappling with the dire challenges of a 41.1% unemployment rate, entrenched levels of poverty and inequality, endemic crime and corruption. It is being considered whilst the state experiences severe financial constraints.

The costs and damage of the decade of state capture and corruption are well known. What is not appreciated by many is the role of public procurement in fueling it. The state with an annual public procurement budget of R1 trillion is tempting, low hanging fruit to be feasted upon by a growing class of tenderpreneurs built solely to profit at the public's expense.

Lax public procurement practices, particularly in local government and state-owned enterprises (SOEs), have seen the development of an incestuous relationship between corrupt and criminal elements in the public and private sectors. At times individuals within supply chain management in the state create companies in their relatives' names and ensure that they receive lucrative state tenders.

These tenders all too often are rigged at prices far above their market value. Media headlines are rife with tenderpreneurs failing to provide the goods they were paid for, often requiring the state to pay twice.

The victims of this bonanza of state capture and corruption are the nurses and patients when the state does not have enough money to fund quality public healthcare. The victims are women and children in a society where criminals believe there are few consequences for breaking the law. The victims are the 41.1% of South Africans who cannot find work when investors are reluctant to put their money in a society seen to be riddled with crime and corruption.

The Mercury

यह कहानी The Mercury के March 09, 2026 संस्करण से ली गई है।

हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।

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