The world’s largest consulting company, McKinsey, now has an unenviable distinction to its name: a starring role in a Harvard Business School study which looks at what happens when multinationals in Africa take a rather flexible approach to "facilitation payments". Last week, it emerged that Harvard professor Caroline Elkins taught a four-day course in January centred on SA’s state capture scandal, called "Africa Rising: Understanding Business, Entrepreneurship and the Complexities of a Continent". In Elkins’ course, 30 African graduates from Harvard discussed the 2015 deal in which McKinsey clinched a R1.6bn contract to "turn around" Eskom — R600m of which then ended up in the pockets of Trillian, a shadowy company part-owned by allies of the Guptas. Jim Aisner, spokesman for the Harvard Business School, said the McKinsey vignette was "meant to be used as the basis for student discussion and role-playing and was never meant for public consumption". "This was supposed to be a privat...

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