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SA job market faces trying times  Comments
January 13, 2010

By SAMANTHA ENSLIN-PAYNE


Job creation in South Africa is likely to be an elusive goal this year, unless the government's efforts to protect existing jobs and provide incentives for new employment are doubled.

A recent report by the research arm of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) warns that the job crisis is far from over and could even worsen unless adequate action is taken and support measures remain in place.

Loane Sharp, a labour market analyst at Adcorp, said yesterday the ILO had been too cautious on its international outlook for job creation. The green shoots seen in the international financial services sector and international trade - the two sectors that were worst hit by the global economic crisis - were incontrovertible.

But the South African situation was less optimistic. As monetary policy tightened for a long time into the crisis and aggravated the slump, the South African job market was likely to be depressed for longer.

"We have not yet turned the corner and are about six to nine months behind international recovery trends. Apart from public works-related investment in construction and electrification, we are going to find negative surprises on the jobs front," Sharp said.

Jobs data due out next month are expected to show that about 1 million jobs were lost last year in South Africa. In the first nine months of the year 959 000 jobs were shed.

John Botha, the chief operating officer of the Confederation of Associations in the Private Employment Sector, said the employment situation for temporary staff appeared to have stabilised. But overall the outlook for jobs was not good, with 1.5 percent growth forecast for South Africa this year.

Jaco Kleynhans, the spokesman for trade union Solidarity, said the job market should stabilise over the next six months, but quality jobs would not be created until the second half of the year, although the World Cup would skew data, as temporary work would be available.


The ILO said stimulus packages had limited job losses, based on analysis of previous crises. But 20 million people have lost their jobs since October 2008 and a further 5 million people remain vulnerable to retrenchment if government support is withdrawn, or if the economic recovery is not strong enough, meaning a real recovery will materialise only when employment recovers.

Job losses have continued this month, with Japan Airlines retrenching 15 600 people. In South Africa retrenchments are still under way in the agriculture sector.

Based on the latest International Monetary Fund growth estimate of 3 percent, the ILO calculates that employment in countries with high gross domestic products per capita may not return to pre-crisis levels before 2013, unless more decisive measures are taken to stimulate job creation. In developing countries employment levels could start recovering this year, but may not reach pre-crisis levels before 2011.

Patrick Craven, the Cosatu spokesman, said yesterday: "I am confident the government is still moving in the right direction, but we urgently need to see words turned into deeds."

He said the government's response to the economic crisis, which had first been launched in February last year, had not yet been fully implemented.

A progress report to the president on the implementation of South Africa's response to the international crisis said: "Some areas have been strongly implemented while other areas have not been concluded with the necessary urgency."

Zubeida Jaffer, the spokeswoman for Minister of Economic Development Ebrahim Patel, said the government would push ahead with the further implementation of the framework agreement on its response to the international economic crisis.

Priority would be given to speeding up the training lay-off scheme and intensifying the crackdown on customs fraud, as well as supporting distressed companies, she said.
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Showing page 1 of 1 comment pages, 4 total comments
33 Weeks ago Sue K wrote :
Ahem!! how many jobs was Zuma promising, and will he fulfill his promises? We will see who votes in the next elections.
33 Weeks ago Anonymous wrote :
During 1992 I was visiting the UK which had been through a tough recession and passed a timber yard which had a fascinating sign at the entrance " Sorry no jobs,WORK available,apply within" The implications of the thought process behind this has never left me. Is it possible we have something to learn from it?
33 Weeks ago Cliff wrote :
I have been trying to contact the Minister of labour you the best part of 6 months. I get no reply to my mail or faxes. I have a product that will create 50000 jobs in a very short space of time may be as little as 3 months. I need to get the information to the Minister so that he can see for himself. But alas no one cares, they all talk about job creation but when there is a way to create jobs no one replies. Why do we bother, because we care. Someone in Govenment wakeup.
33 Weeks ago KG wrote :
The President promised 500, 000.00 job creation by end of 2009, has this materialised? We have instaed saw unemployment rate increasing Disturbingly high. Was this measured or it was a way to win the hearts of voters at that time, becuase by the time of the announcement Recession was looming. I think we deserve feedback on this matter. Most of the 2010 jobs are a temporary solution to the economy, to sustain and alleviate the current loss of jobs and poverty, we need long term job creation that will see continuous growth in the economy. ACTIONS ARE DESPERATELY NEEDED THAN WORDS. lets get to work South Africa
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