Deputy Speaker, I think that the model that I outlined suggested a rather different path in terms of supporting economic empowerment than that which the hon James is proposing. We don't believe that the way forward in terms of empowerment is simply to be allocating a number of shares to people who own them in some portfolio but nothing else happens. We think that the empowerment tool can become a tool that can support the development of real entrepreneurship. It is exactly in relation to those parts of empowerment codes that relate to supply development and enterprise development that we have seen underperformance by existing players in the economy.
So, our approach now is to elevate those elements so that we can create real momentum where big companies in the private sector support small companies, much along the lines of the model that successful Asian economies have implemented. We want to try and turn black economic empowerment from a tool of allowing simply passive ownership of assets of companies that are owned and controlled by other people, in which black people have no real rights of ownership, into a tool that promotes much more effective real productive involvement in the economy. That is the approach that we are following, and I don't think that the approach of selling off a bunch of shares in state-owned enterprises is a serious alternative. Thank you.