1. Gogo Aubrey Mashiqi 2. Khaya Sithole 3. Jamie Mighti 4. Jamil F. Khan 5. Zuma's Advocate, I forgot his name but he was great when you listen to him without looking at the fact that he is Zuma's advocate. These were my favourite guests. They break concepts down so simply.
Entities like Eskom and Prasa are natural monopolies. That is why state ownership is justified. The private sector could handle it, but would then exploit market power to increase prices and increase profits. Government running these entities could be good for the people of SA if the government can do it responsible ensuring that they can provide low prices and keep costs low even if they are not beholden to market forces. As we can see by the debt that public entities have accumulated, the government is not succeeding in running these entities.
We have great minds in South Africa and we are not using them. Khaya Sithole should be one of President Ramaphosas advisers. We need people like him badly in this Country.
I'm intrigued by his analysis of the status quo, the aesthetic of this our RSA is an elitist one, all outcomes seem to be geared toward pushing further up those who have access and simply overlooking those without, and we all know that whatever is stagnant usually rots or collects dust. The transition into this democracy, looking at it 26 years later, a year older than myself, was not only compromised but grossly uninformed. We expected a people, +30 million strong, who still own live chickens for food (as a necessity and not a luxury, ironically it can be a luxury) to assimilate to a way of life that had normalized things like premium oxtail soup. I agree with Khaya, we have it all backwards, instead of building newer smarter cities that perpetuate notions access, we absolutely have to humble ourselves and acknowledge that ours is a problem of capacity and a mission of capacitating. Most importantly we need to allow for a natural evolution of affairs over an artificial directing of affairs, which is where Khaya and I would probably be at odds, primaface.
Where can one access the latest data on these matters? For academic purposes. Most of the content I found through google scholar and Sabinet is from about 5 to 10 years ago.
I love how Khaya breaks things down so simply and clearly
1. Gogo Aubrey Mashiqi
2. Khaya Sithole
3. Jamie Mighti
4. Jamil F. Khan
5. Zuma's Advocate, I forgot his name but he was great when you listen to him without looking at the fact that he is Zuma's advocate.
These were my favourite guests. They break concepts down so simply.
🙌🏽🙌🏽
Skhakhane
@@siphonxele8627 yes!
5.. Adv Muzi Sikhakhane.
Khaya what an absolute pleasure listening to you. Minister of Finance in the making.
Khaya sithole is 💯💯💯we want him back 💪
I'm almost completely hypnotized by the level insight 🔥
Entities like Eskom and Prasa are natural monopolies. That is why state ownership is justified. The private sector could handle it, but would then exploit market power to increase prices and increase profits. Government running these entities could be good for the people of SA if the government can do it responsible ensuring that they can provide low prices and keep costs low even if they are not beholden to market forces. As we can see by the debt that public entities have accumulated, the government is not succeeding in running these entities.
So insightful 🔥🔥🔥🔥. Huge fan.
Thanks for watching! 😀
Please bring him back before the start of local elections 🙏
We need this interview Hlubi!
Oxford Graduates 👌🏽
🙌🏽
Can't get any better than this
Enjoyed every single minute of this! Truly insightful.
Thank you!!!
We have great minds in South Africa and we are not using them. Khaya Sithole should be one of President Ramaphosas advisers. We need people like him badly in this Country.
Very insightful, part two must come.
I'm intrigued by his analysis of the status quo, the aesthetic of this our RSA is an elitist one, all outcomes seem to be geared toward pushing further up those who have access and simply overlooking those without, and we all know that whatever is stagnant usually rots or collects dust.
The transition into this democracy, looking at it 26 years later, a year older than myself, was not only compromised but grossly uninformed. We expected a people, +30 million strong, who still own live chickens for food (as a necessity and not a luxury, ironically it can be a luxury) to assimilate to a way of life that had normalized things like premium oxtail soup.
I agree with Khaya, we have it all backwards, instead of building newer smarter cities that perpetuate notions access, we absolutely have to humble ourselves and acknowledge that ours is a problem of capacity and a mission of capacitating.
Most importantly we need to allow for a natural evolution of affairs over an artificial directing of affairs, which is where Khaya and I would probably be at odds, primaface.
👏 wow
fond the interview empowering
I need the pop corns for this interview 😁😊
😁😂👍🏽
Where can one access the latest data on these matters? For academic purposes. Most of the content I found through google scholar and Sabinet is from about 5 to 10 years ago.
Who makes your shirts man? Please share the contact dets
That’s the million dollar question. 😁