South Africa is bracing for a fresh wave of regulatory upheaval as controversial new Employment Equity (EE) quotas are set to take legal effect from 1 September. Signed into law by President Cyril Ramaphosa, these new quotas impose strict race and gender targets across 18 key economic sectors—including agriculture, mining, construction, manufacturing, ICT and financial services. PHOTO: AI-generated These regulations, born from the Employment Equity Amendment Act, signed into law by President Cyril Ramaphosa on 12 May 2023, impose strict race and gender targets across 18 key economic sectors—including agriculture, mining, construction, manufacturing, ICT and financial services. While government officials tout the regulations as a continuation of transformation, critics see a dark cloud gathering over an already fragile economy. What’s changing? From 2026, companies with 50 or more employees must submit valid employment equity plans aligned with the new quotas or risk losing out on government tenders and contracts. The Department of Employment and Labour will begin issuing annual compliance certificates, and those who fail to qualify face fines of up to R1.5 million or 2% of annual turnover—whichever is greater. Official government notices on the new rules confirm that the targets must be achieved by 2030, although critics argue this timeline ignores economic reality and natural workforce turnover. Legal firestorm incoming The regulatory rollout hasn’t gone unchallenged. Earlier this month, two leading business bodies—the National Employers’ Association of South Africa (NEASA) and Sakeliga—filed an urgent High Court application to interdict the implementation of these equity quotas.