<p dir="ltr"> This review analyzes Bill Freund’s article <i>“Black Economic Empowerment and South Africa’s Elite Transition”</i> (2007), which examines South Africa’s post-apartheid transformation through the lens of the developmental state concept and the formation of an “embedded elite.” Freund argues that the Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) policy fostered the emergence of a narrow economic elite closely tied to the African National Congress (ANC), at the expense of broad-based economic development, thereby limiting structural transformation and the participation of the majority population.</p><p dir="ltr"> The review introduces several significant additions to the original analysis. First, it updates the discussion by integrating recent sources and data (Van De Rheede, 2022; Buccus, 2022; Busse, 2025) that reflect the evolution of BEE toward Broad-Based policies. Second, it introduces a formal methodological framework based on contemporary standards for critical evaluation (UNSW, 2023), highlighting the strengths and limitations of Freund’s qualitative approach. Third, it supplements the analysis with comparative appendices between BEE and Malaysia’s New Economic Policy (NEP), providing a structured assessment of economic indicators, ownership distribution, and educational outcomes.</p><p dir="ltr">The review also adds an ethical and governance dimension, emphasizing the persistence of inequalities, risks of clientelism, and the tension between elite consolidation and social inclusion. In conclusion, while Freund’s article remains a fundamental contribution to understanding South Africa’s elite transition, contemporary evidence underscores the need for greater transparency in monitoring, stronger empirical validation, and more inclusive reforms capable of transforming BEE from an elite-centered mechanism into a genuine instrument of equitable and sustainable development.</p><p dir="ltr"><br><br></p>