Government-business partnership to accelerate delivery – BLSA

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Senior business leaders met with President Cyril Ramaphosa and ministers under the Government Business Partnership recently.

The partners in the government-business partnership to accelerate delivery – the BLSA partnership have agreed to fast-track the implementation of key structural reforms and support performance improvements at Transnet and Eskom through an accelerated delivery plan and an intensified phase of its ongoing efforts to expedite delivery on priority interventions vital to economic growth and job creation.

Busisiwe Mavuso, CEO of Business Leadership South Africa (BLSA), says in her latest newsletter that the Government Business Partnership, established in 2023, is focused on accelerating crucial reforms and operational improvements to lift confidence levels and drive economic growth in four priority areas of energy, transport and logistics, crime and corruption and youth employment. Youth employment was added in January 2025.

“The partnership believes that this acceleration is necessary to achieve a step-change in progress in response to difficult economic headwinds. Focus will remain on improving Eskom’s Energy Availability Factor (EAF) and unblocking delays in new generation capacity to ensure a continued reprieve from load shedding.

“Work is underway to resolve grid access and allocation bottlenecks that hinder new generation projects. While Transnet’s performance is not at the level required, it has stabilised and there is a significant focus on growing volumes, which will increase exports and revenue collected to support economic growth and preserve and grow employment.”

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Accelerated delivery needed in complex environment

 She emphasises that expediting reforms and performance improvement is crucial to reduce the possible negative impact of the complex global and domestic environment, which continues to present substantial challenges and uncertainty.

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth projections for 2025 have been revised down and current forecasts remain far below the minimum of 3% economic growth required to create the level of jobs needed to make an impact on the country’s high levels of unemployment, she says.

According to Mavuso Ramaphosa said: “Through the strength of this partnership, we have been able to unlock many constraints that undermine growth and job creation. While there is much to improve, the dedication and commitment from both government and business remains undiminished. The pace of our work must increase to match the scale of the challenge.”

She says important progress has been made to lay the groundwork for sustained accelerated action, including the finalisation of the Transnet Network Statement, the launch of a Request for Information (RFI) to attract private investment in port and rail infrastructure and Nersa’s approval of electricity wheeling regulations.

“These reforms enable broader private sector participation in energy, transport and logistics. Both the crime and corruption and the youth employment focal areas are largely tracking against their plans which have a longer-term time horizon.”

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Partnership welcomes second phase of Operation Vulindlela

In line with the commitment to focused execution, the Partnership welcomed the launch of the second phase of Operation Vulindlela, which has a delivery focus that closely aligns with the Partnership’s objective of more rapidly accelerating reforms and operational improvements that will drive growth and job creation, Mavuso says.

She says at the meeting Adrian Gore, vice president of Business Unity South Africa (Busa) and business co-convenor of the Partnership, said: “We are entering this accelerated execution ‘sprint’ with a real sense of urgency.

“Progress has been made, but it is not enough. This requires a step change in the pace of decision-making and execution. We need to redouble our collective efforts to help shift the country onto a sustained upward trajectory and deliver on our shared ambition of a virtuous cycle of growth, jobs, a more positive narrative and increased investment.”

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