Business Day

Base increases on actual pay rates, Solidarity tells steel employers

- Luyolo Mkentane mkentanel@businessli­ve.co.za

Trade union Solidarity has lashed out at steel sector bosses’ proposal to base wage increases on minimum rates of pay and not on actual wages, saying this would disadvanta­ge skilled and experience­d artisans.

Unions including Solidarity and the National Union of Metalworke­rs of SA (Numsa) met industry bosses for a second round of wage talks at the Metal and Engineerin­g Industries Bargaining Council in Boksburg, near Joburg, on Wednesday.

They have called on employer bodies such as the Consolidat­ed Employers Organisati­on, National Employers Associatio­n of SA, SA Engineers and Founders Associatio­n, employer organisati­on SAUEO, and the Steel and Engineerin­g Industries Federation of Southern Africa (Seifsa) to table a meaningful wage offer based on the actual rates of pay — not on the minimum rate of pay — in the steel and engineerin­g sector, where the lowest-paid employee earns R59.10 per hour.

“The deceptive wage offer presented by the various employer organisati­ons ranges between 6% for the lowest level (grade H) employees and 5% for skilled (grade A) employees, but the offer is tied to the minimum rates of pay per job category, and not based on the actual wages earned by employees, a stance that Solidarity has rejected outright,” said Solidarity general secretary Gideon du Plessis.

Solidarity is demanding a 6% wage increase each year for three years. “But we want the increases to be based on the actual rate of pay,” stressed Du Plessis.

Numsa, SA’s largest trade union, is demanding increases of 7% in the first year and 6% for the second and third years.

Stats SA reported recently that consumer inflation eased for the first time in 2024 to 5.3% in March, from 5.6% in February. The SA Reserve Bank and some economists expect inflation to average about 5% for the year, down from 6% in 2023.

Du Plessis said to base increases on minimum rates of pay would result in skilled and experience­d employees receiving an increase well below the consumer price index (CPI), “whereas entry-level employees would receive above-CPI increases, an offer which does not only have ethical implicatio­ns but places the industry at risk of exacerbati­ng a talent drain of scarce skills”.

“To illustrate the implicatio­ns of this scenario, one can refer to the fact that the actual pay rate for a grade A (highly skilled) artisan is on average R200 per hour, while the prevailing collective agreement mandates a minimum pay rate of R98.11 for entry-level (grade H) artisans.

“The 5% increase is then based on the minimum rates, and as a result, the entry-level artisan will receive the 5% increase that relates to an increase of R4.91 per hour, while the top-level artisan’s real wage increase amounts to only 2.4% based on the R4.91 per hour increase. The compoundin­g effect of this arrangemen­t is unsustaina­ble both at an individual level and at an industry level,” Du Plessis said.

“Solidarity firmly opposes the continuati­on of basing increases on the minimum wage rates to the detriment of employees possessing scarce skills.”

Du Plessis called on employer organisati­ons to review their wage increase offer and “base it on the actual wage rates as was the case until 2021, and to not further disadvanta­ge skilled employees”.

The steel sector, which has been a victim of declining prices due to an increase in cheap imports, accounts for about 1.5% of GDP and employs about 190,000 people.

Lucio Trentini, CEO of Seifsa, the sector’s largest-employer body, could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

The final round of talks is set to be held on May 8.

 ?? ?? Gideon du Plessis
Gideon du Plessis

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