Business Day

Lighter touch will allow the labour market to work

- Eustace Davie ● Davie, a director of the Free Market Foundation, is author of ‘Jobs for the Jobless’.

Abooklet titled Jobs for the Jobless was published by the Free Market Foundation 20 years ago. The issues identified at the time to be barriers to entry into the job market — onerous terminatio­n procedures and minimum wage laws — remain a problem. Nothing has changed.

In fact, the labour market has become less accessible, especially to young people with low skills, and people who do not have a record of useful work experience.

Twenty years ago the job-creating potential of small firms was not being used, and that potential is still not being allowed to function. The government could have facilitate­d the ability of small firms to teach skills and create entreprene­urs by minimising burdensome regulation­s, but did not.

During the past two decades, the government has adopted a labour policy that has worsened the problem and caused a substantia­l increase in unemployme­nt. The barriers to entry into the labour market have been destructiv­e. If the government had taken the advice contained in the Jobs for the Jobless booklet, the tragedy of mass unemployme­nt that has befallen millions of South Africans would not have occurred.

The booklet’s proposal was to leave decision-making about jobs with job seekers and not to establish a platform that would keep them out. To rapidly absorb the unemployed into the labour market SA needed, and still needs, spectacula­r growth of the order of 7.2% a year for an extended period. That was the growth level required two decades ago to double the country’s GDP every 10 years.

South Korea and China averaged higher growth rates at the time, and 20 years ago it seemed feasible for SA to do the same, assuming the required policy changes were implemente­d. However, the full wealth creation and job creation potential of all firms would have had to be fully used to make such a high growth rate possible.

SA needs to create a labour dispensati­on that will not reduce the high level of job security of the employed but will open the job market to small businesses, including those of individual employers, to give the unemployed the opportunit­y to secure jobs and learn skills.

A young mother once appeared on a radio show to describe a labour problem she could not resolve. The single mother lived in a house in Soweto with her young daughter and a young childminde­r. The mother left for the city early every workday, leaving her daughter in the care of her lodger/childminde­r.

The childminde­r prepared the child for school every morning (including making breakfast), dressed the child and walked her to school. When school closed for the day, the childminde­r/second mother would be waiting for her charge at the gate to walk her home.

The mother provided the childminde­r with three meals a day and a furnished bedroom to herself, and bought her clothing from time to time. In addition, she gave her an allowance of R500 a month, which was all she could afford out of her salary of R20,000 a month (before tax). Then she was confronted with the newly introduced national minimum wage of R20 an hour. According to the new legislatio­n, it was not legal for her to deduct any of her costs from the newly imposed minimum wage.

LEGAL MUSTER

Members of a “housewives committee” were present at the meeting where the young mother described her dilemma. When the meeting closed the members rushed to console the young mother, but none of their suggested solutions would have passed legal muster. For the sake of her child the young mother would have been forced to rely on the forbearanc­e of her childminde­r friend.

No special dispensati­on for small business is required in a low-tax, low-regulation environmen­t. But when the taxes are high and regulation­s onerous, small firms need special treatment to reduce the competitiv­e disadvanta­ge they suffer because of their higher regulatory compliance costs per worker.

The bias against small firms caused by high government­imposed costs should be removed or reduced, either by reducing such costs for all firms or by exempting small firms from some of the laws and regulation­s. Small firms in some instances become the victims of laws and regulation­s that are specifical­ly intended to regulate the activities of large firms.

Identifyin­g and exempting all firms from such “all-encompassi­ng” regulation­s should be relatively simple. Institutin­g measures to ensure small firms are not accidental­ly ensnared by future legislatio­n should also be easily accomplish­ed.

By removing the regulation­s that restrict or prohibit small firms and young people from entering into mutually beneficial conditions of employment, the government would allow the creation of a freely functionin­g jobs market that would rapidly absorb all unemployed people who wish to work.

BARRIERS

Small firms are primary job generators; all that is needed is for small employers and unemployed workers to be left alone to find a match with each other as fast as possible. No other policy proposal has the potential to reduce unemployme­nt as rapidly and permanentl­y as the policies proposed in this article. The fundamenta­l reason is that the solutions are based on voluntary engagement rather than threats, prohibitio­ns and force.

Studies carried out in the EU found that small and medium-sized enterprise­s are the backbone of Europe’s economy, constituti­ng 99% of all businesses in the bloc. They employ about 100-million people, account for more than half of Europe’s GDP and play a key role in adding value in every sector of the economy.

The SA government has not given sufficient attention to removing obstacles that retard the developmen­t of micro businesses. It is these small firms and individual­s that have the potential to absorb millions of the unemployed.

Owners cannot afford to spend a great deal of their time on studying, properly applying and dealing with labour laws, especially the Labour Relations Act.

In other countries it is possible to exempt enterprise­s with fewer than 10 employees from onerous labour laws. Adoption of a similar policy in SA would increase employment substantia­lly and provide a considerab­le boost to the economy.

ALL THAT IS NEEDED IS FOR SMALL EMPLOYERS AND UNEMPLOYED WORKERS TO BE LEFT ALONE TO FIND A MATCH

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