Cape Times

Cutting the cost of public holidays

- John Botes John Botes is partner and head of Employment and Compensati­on practice, Baker McKenzie (Johannesbu­rg).

AFOREIGN business executive recently visiting our shores expressed surprise at the number of public holidays enjoyed by South Africans. With four public holidays in short succession in April, one can appreciate his amazement.

Companies must contend with four consecutiv­e weeks reduced to four-day weeks during April and May 2017, wreaking havoc on productivi­ty and throughput.

Our country’s ranking on apparent labour market inflexibil­ity (129th out of 140 countries according to the World Economic Forum Competitiv­eness rankings 2015/2016) suggests that businesses perceive ours to be a rigid operating environmen­t. Is this justified, though, and can employers limit their exposure to the cost inherent in paid public holidays?

South Africa guarantees its citizens at least 12 public holidays per year. An average of one public holiday per month does not seem extravagan­t, or does it? Sri Lanka appears to be the undisputed world champions of public holidays with 25 public holidays per year (http://www. worldatlas.com/articles/countries-withthe-most-public-holidays.html).

Propping them up in second place, with a respectabl­e 21 public holidays per annum, is India. It comes as little surprise that Scandinavi­an bastions of labour force protection, Sweden (15) and Norway (13), grant employees significan­t numbers of public holidays.

Some of the countries providing the highest number of public holidays are not those that would regularly spring to mind, including Colombia and the Philippine­s (18), Thailand, Turkey and Pakistan (17) and, joining Sweden on 15 days, Japan, Malaysia, Argentina and Lithuania.

Even South Koreans get a generous allotment of 13 days per year! It thus seems that South Africans do not enjoy significan­tly more time off due to statutory public holidays than colleagues in many other jurisdicti­ons.

But when faced with an economy that is being challenged on many fronts, some businesses can ill afford to absorb the cost of paying employees for an additional day where they are not expected to work (or to pay them double wages where the employees indeed work on the public holiday).

When one sees the number of businesses downsizing, relocating operations to other jurisdicti­ons or closing their doors, the harshness of the realities facing businesses is driven home.

For those organisati­ons that have to make tough calls on continued viability and justifying their labour bill or loss in productivi­ty, there may be some reprieve. The answer could lie in reading together the obligation­s and flexibilit­y permitted in both the Basic Conditions of Employment Act and the Public Holidays Act (PHA).

Every employee is entitled to the public holidays published in the PHA (section 5(1) of that act). Employees are also entitled to remunerati­on for the public holidays (section 5(2) of the PHA and section 18(2) of the BCEA).

Where the employee does not work on a public holiday (where the day falls on what would otherwise have been a normal working day), the employee remains entitled to payment for that day. In essence, an employer may not deduct a day’s wages from an employee’s remunerati­on merely because the employee did not work as a result of the day being a public holiday.

Where the employee works on a public holiday (and that day would have been a normal working day), the employee is typically entitled to double normal wage for that day.

The company is thus faced with a situation where it either forfeits the productivi­ty of the employee for that day (and pays normal wage for the public holiday) or receives the benefit of the employee’s service, but pays double for it. The phrase Hobson’s Choice springs to mind…

But an oft-forgotten section of the PHA may unlock some relief for embattled employers. In terms of section 2(2) of the PHA, an employer and employee may agree to exchange a public holiday for any other day. Thus, an employee who does not wish to celebrate Christmas may thus exchange that public holiday for another day that have some significan­ce to the employee.

The employee would thus work on Christmas Day, at normal remunerati­on, but would be entitled to take off a day to celebrate Diwali, Rosh Hashanah or another day of significan­ce to the employee or community. The employer would then treat the substitute day as a public holiday for the employee. Thus, the employee would not be required to attend work on that day and will receive normal remunerati­on for that day.

Should things change and the employer expect the employee to work on this substitute day, the employer would have to pay the employee double for the work done on that day.

Employers could seek to obtain the employee’s consent to exchange a public holiday (listed in the PHA) for another day where the employee would ordinarily work. The parties would agree that the employee would work on, say, Workers’ Day, but exchange that public holiday for a normal working day, but at a time suitable to the employer’s business operation.

The value in this arrangemen­t is that the employer can stagger the impact of either lost production or increased cost occasioned by employees working on public holidays.

Organisati­ons with 24/7/365 operations could benefit from an agreement allowing them to let employees exchange public holidays for periods during which the business experience­s lulls in production or undergoes seasonal maintenanc­e.

Considerin­g how jealously some employees guard their public holidays, obtaining their consent for this exchange may be easier said than done. However, prudent employers may wish to insert wording to this effect into their employment contracts.

 ?? PHOTO: MATTHEWS BALOYI ?? Celebratin­g Workers’ Day. But by consent some may prefer to work on this day and enjoy another day off-duty in lieu, says the writer.
PHOTO: MATTHEWS BALOYI Celebratin­g Workers’ Day. But by consent some may prefer to work on this day and enjoy another day off-duty in lieu, says the writer.

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