Answer:
South Africa has a developed and regulated competition regime based on best international practice.
South Africa’s economic system is predominantly based on free market principles. However, as in most developed economies, competition is controlled.
The Competition Act of 1998 fundamentally reformed the country’s competition legislation, substantially strengthening the powers of the competition authorities along the lines of the European Union, US and Canadian models.
Answer:
Unethical leader behaviors such as falsifying information, promoting their own self-serving personal vision; censure opposing views; demand their own decisions be accepted without question; engage in one-way communication; show insensitivity to followers' needs; and rely on convenient external moral standards to .
Answer:
<em>Middleman Minorities </em>
Explanation:
A minority middleman is <em>a minority group of which the primary occupations connect producers with consumers: traders, money lenders, etc.</em>
A middleman minority, though likely experiencing prejudice, doesn't have an "extreme inferior" position in society.
Sociologists such as Blalock and Bonacich have developed the definition of "middleman minority" since the 1960s, but it is also used by political scientists and economists.
The Appointments Clause [of Article II] clearly implies a power of the Senate to give advice on and, if it chooses to do so, to consent to a nomination, but it says nothing about how the Senate should go about exercising that power. The text of the Constitution thus leaves the Senate free to exercise that power however it sees fit. Throughout American history, the Senate has frequently – surely, thousands of times – exercised its power over nominations by declining to act on them.