Multinational subsidiaries across Africa share a common structural problem. The regional legal team is expected to handle local compliance, contracts, employment matters, regulatory engagement, and escalations – with a headcount and budget that reflects neither the complexity nor the volume of what is being asked of them.
The result is a function that is permanently reactive. Not because the lawyers are not good. Because the design is wrong.
The design problem
Most subsidiary legal teams are built as scaled-down versions of the group function. The assumption is that local legal – being smaller – should operate like a smaller firm: the same model, less capacity, proportionally less output.
This assumption breaks in Africa. The regulatory environment across Southern African jurisdictions is not a simplified version of global legal. It is a distinct set of regimes – POPIA, B-BBEE, the Companies Act, sector-specific licensing requirements, local employment law – each of which requires specific expertise that the group team neither has nor can efficiently provide from offshore.
When the design is wrong, the symptoms are predictable:
- The GC spends a disproportionate share of time managing demand rather than advising on risk
- Local teams reinvent work that global policies already cover, because no one told them the policy existed
- Legal panel firms are briefed reactively, without visibility into what has already been done or what the matter is likely to cost
- Joiner, mover, leaver processes are handled inconsistently, creating employment law exposure that compounds over time
What a well-designed subsidiary legal function looks like
The shift that matters is from headcount thinking to service design. A legal function designed as a service asks different questions:
- What categories of legal demand does this business generate, and what is the right way to handle each one?
- Which work should be done in-house, which should go to a retained external team on agreed terms, and which should be briefed to specialist firms on a matter-by-matter basis?
- What does the global policy library cover, and how does local legal adapt and implement – rather than replicate?
- How does the team report to both local leadership and the group function without creating two masters?
These are not abstract governance questions. They are the difference between a legal function that adds value and one that is permanently catching up.
The Africa-specific layer
African subsidiaries face a compounding challenge that pure service design does not fully address: the pool of lawyers with deep, cross-disciplinary expertise across African jurisdictions is small, and attracting them through traditional employment is slow, expensive, and frequently unsuccessful.
What works better in this market is a flexible model: a small in-house team focused on relationship management and escalation, supported by an external platform of specialists who are briefed on defined terms and available without the overhead of partnership-model billing.
This is not a cost-cutting measure. It is a capacity design that reflects the actual supply of legal talent in the market.
Caveat Legal supports General Counsel and regional legal teams at multinational subsidiaries operating across Southern Africa. If your legal function is structurally under-resourced relative to what it is being asked to deliver, we can help you think through what a better model looks like – and provide the specialist capacity to support it.
