CAPE TOWN - Analysts have come out in support of an in-depth probe into alleged discriminatory practices by the country’s banks, ahead of the Competition Commission hearings on Monday.
Just last month, the Sekunjalo Group filed a petition with the Equality Court where the company alleges discrimination by various banks following their decision to cut ties with the Group.
Gardee Godrich Attorneys, representing more than 6 000 South Africans, has also applied to intervene in the proceedings, and will seek certification to bring a class action suit against South African banks and financial institutions for alleged racial and other discrimination.
The Sekunjalo Group has also approached the Competitions Commission to probe alleged collusion between the banks.
Lawyer Zelna Jansen said the current system was regarded as “the lesser evil” compared to others.
She said the price of property was so out of reach for many that it was regarded as the norm to obtain a mortgage bond and pay for at least 20 or 30 years. “It’s grooming people to behave in a certain way. Get it now and pay later... But in hindsight, did anybody read the fine print?
“If you had, would the banking institution change that standard agreement?” she asked.
She said Covid-19 had quickly burst this bubble, leaving many heavily indebted.
“Of course, those that have, celebrate the capitalist system and guard what they have, while those that don’t have, will suffer the harsh consequences and try to get out of it. (The system) is rigged with insurmountable hurdles.
“Financial institutions do therefore play a pivotal role in enforcing the capitalist system in South Africa’s economy,” Jansen said.
Kim Heller, author of No White Lies: Black Politics and White Power in South Africa agrees. Heller said the sector’s slow pace of transformation hindered the nation’s collective effort to reverse and remedy the historical legacy of economic dislodgement and exclusion of black South Africans.
She said the economic dislocation of black South Africans in current day South Africa was a “far cry” from the storybook vision of an equitable and just society, as envisaged in the Constitution.
“For most black South Africans today, the ‘do not enter’ sign is still very much in place when it comes to meaningful economic access, participation, and ownership,” she said.
Heller said the truth was that the system was flawed because the sector’s fundamentals remained untransformed.
“Access to finance and capital remain a serious impediment.
They cannot compete with white individuals and white businesses who have generations of capital, and ready, enabling networks and access. The stark reality of the day is that the financial services sector continues to prop up white economic power.
“The question that should be keeping the sector and government awake at night is for how much longer will black South Africans put up with being on the peripheries of their own economy?” Heller asked.
Cape Times