Theme: Industrial policy
Responsible: DTIC / SEZ Advisory Board
Medium feasibility. Legislative framework (SEZ Act) is sound. Implementation failures are governance and execution-related. Rationalisation of portfolio politically sensitive but analytically well-supported.
Who backs this reform, who needs convincing, and which interests or red lines shape political feasibility.
Backers
14
2 stakeholders
Negotiation weight
17
2 conditional actors
Opposition weight
0
0 opposing actors
Review coverage
0/4
All mapped stance notes are still draft
Provenance warning
Every mapped stakeholder stance for this idea is still draft. The coalition score is directional only until at least the high-influence actors are reviewed.
Coalition Read
Anchor: DTIC (Dept. of Trade, Industry & Competition). Highest-leverage swing actor: National Treasury.
Political Tractability
No reviewed signals · 0% of mapped influence has been reviewed.
SEZ reform is a DTIC mandate, though the department acknowledges performance has been mixed.
Interest: Industrial policy objectives — local content requirements, beneficiation, BBBEE transformation, SEZ development, and protection of manufacturing emplo…
Concern: Full logistics liberalisation without local content protections could hollow out domestic manufacturing by reducing input costs asymmetrically for ext…
Engagement path: Logistics and energy reforms include localisation provisions and domestic content requirements; trade agreements include industrial policy safeguards;…
SEZ reform is core DTIC mandate; the department is developing improved governance and incentive frameworks.
Interest: Industrial policy objectives — local content requirements, beneficiation, BBBEE transformation, SEZ development, and protection of manufacturing emplo…
Concern: Full logistics liberalisation without local content protections could hollow out domestic manufacturing by reducing input costs asymmetrically for ext…
Engagement path: Logistics and energy reforms include localisation provisions and domestic content requirements; trade agreements include industrial policy safeguards;…
Treasury supports SEZ reform only if tax incentive costs are justified by measurable investment and employment outcomes.
Interest: Fiscal consolidation with public debt stabilising below 75% of GDP; structural reforms that improve revenue without expanding contingent liabilities;…
Concern: Unfunded mandates in energy transition (JETP co-financing); Eskom's R400bn+ debt and how restructuring socialises costs; reform proposals that create…
Engagement path: Reforms must be fiscally neutral or revenue-positive over the MTEF window; SOE restructuring must demonstrably reduce contingent liabilities; credible…
BUSA supports SEZ reform but demands streamlined regulatory approval and functioning infrastructure before new designations.
Interest: Cross-sector structural reform across energy security, logistics efficiency, regulatory certainty, labour market flexibility, and digital infrastructu…
Concern: Slow implementation pace relative to policy announcements; inconsistency between reform rhetoric and regulatory decisions (e.g. NERSA tariff approvals…
Engagement path: Already actively engaged. Seeks implementation accountability mechanisms with published milestones, predictable regulatory timelines, and NEDLAC outco…
South Africa's Special Economic Zones programme, established under the SEZ Act (2014) and administered by DTIC, encompasses 11 designated zones including Coega, OR Tambo, East London IDZ, and the embattled Nkomazi SEZ. The programme offers investors tax concessions (15% corporate tax vs 27%), customs duty relief, employment incentives, and one-stop-shop regulatory services. However, uptake has been uneven: established zones (Coega IDZ, East London IDZ) attract significant investment, while newer zones like Nkomazi remain largely unoccupied despite years of infrastructure investment and preparation. The PC on Trade BRRR 2024 cited governance failures at Nkomazi, unresolved traditional leader land disputes, and inadequate utilities as root causes. The reform proposes: rationalising the portfolio to 6–8 high-performing zones, strengthening the SEZ Advisory Board, mandating performance contracts with annual investment and job targets, and linking SEZ infrastructure investment to the IDMS framework to improve project execution. The MTBPS 2025 allocates R4.2 billion to SEZ infrastructure over the MTEF period.
The Nkomazi SEZ received R400 million in public investment and remains non-operational five years after designation—a cautionary lesson in the difference between designating zones and creating investor-ready industrial ecosystems. — PC on Trade, Industry and Competition BRRR, 2024
DTIC conducts a forensic governance review of the Nkomazi SEZ by Q2 2025, resolves outstanding traditional-leader land claims through COGTA and the provincial government, and tables an SEZ Amendment Bill addressing zone operator accountability and minimum utility-provision obligations. The SEZ Programme Office standardises the one-stop-shop investor facilitation model across all 11 zones using Coega IDZ and East London IDZ as benchmarks, with a shared technology platform for applications. Eskom and municipal entities are placed under binding SLA obligations for utility delivery to SEZs, enforceable via NERSA licence conditions. Success is at least 3 new anchor investors in greenfield SEZ sites by 2027 and a 20% increase in SEZ employment.
EV White Paper — Managed Automotive Transition
Automotive Production and Development Programme (APDP Phase 2) Enhancement
AGOA Retention and Post-AGOA Trade Diversification
Critical Minerals Beneficiation Strategy
AfCFTA Implementation and Intra-African Trade Expansion
BBBEE Equity Equivalent Investment Programme (EEIP) Expansion
How to cite
Wilse-Samson, L. (2026). Special Economic Zones Reform. SA Policy Space. NYU Wagner School of Public Policy. Retrieved 11 May 2026, from https://sa-policy-space.vercel.app/ideas/special-economic-zones-reform?snapshot=2026-05-11
Data as of 2026-05-11 · latest PMG meeting 2026-05-08