Cape Times

Cosatu demands corruption probe

Must determine cost to economy, says Losi

- LUYOLO MKENTANE luyolo.mkentane@inl.co.za

NEWLY ELECTED Cosatu boss Zingiswa Losi has called on the government to conduct a thorough skills audit in the civil service to determine how much corruption and bloated management has cost the economy.

In an interview with Business Report ahead of the Jobs Summit this week, Losi said the government should not start its mooted retrenchme­nts at the lower levels of the public service.

She said it should look at how much the exit packages and golden handshakes that the government had paid to executives in the state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs), which are supposed to drive economic growth and employment, had crippled the civil service.

Losi said SOEs such as the public broadcaste­r SABC, power utility Eskom, arms manufactur­er Denel, and national carrier SAA had crumpled because of poor management and corruption. “Who suffers at the end of the day when you are talking about retrenchme­nts? It’s ordinary workers while the ones dispensing patronage receive golden handshakes.”

The two-day National Economic Developmen­t and Labour Council (Nedlac) Jobs Summit is expected to take place from Thursday. Last week, Statistics South Africa (StatsSA) said unemployme­nt in the country increased to 27.2 percent in the second quarter with manufactur­ing shedding 13 000 jobs during the period. StatsSA said its Quarterly Employment Statistics showed that the economy lost a further 69 000 formal jobs quarter-on-quarter with manufactur­ing and mining industries leading the cuts.

Losi said the government and President Cyril Ramaphosa in particular should not expect to be treated with kid-gloves on retrenchme­nts. While she supported Ramaphosa in the run-up to the watershed ANC national conference in Nasrec last year, the federation’s stance on the mooted retrenchme­nts remained the same. “We are here now, Nasrec is gone. We want to work now,” she said.

Attempts to cut jobs in the civil service would be met with fierce resistance by the federation. Cosatu had identified beneficiat­ion and value addition among initiative­s that could create jobs in the embattled economy. Cosatu would table these and other initiative­s at the summit.

“We can’t shy away from that debate because our own existence relies on the economy creating jobs rather than shedding jobs,” said Losi. The government had a responsibi­lity to assist entreprene­urs and industrial­ists in reigniting the embattled economy.

She trained her guns on the muchtouted black industrial­ists programme: “We are talking about black industrial­ists, but we are not industrial­ising. What are these black industrial­ists going to build their businesses on?”

Losi welcomed Ramaphosa’s ambitious bid to raise $100 billion (R1.4 trillion) in new investment­s over the next five years, but warned that the heavy reliance on foreign direct investment would not solve the country’s unemployme­nt problems. “We need to look internally and begin to pull our own people who have an understand­ing of our economy and the sectors that are key drivers of our economy,” she said.

“If you rely more on foreign direct investment, which is important, it is easy for them to pull out when they want to dictate terms and we are on the back foot.”

 ?? SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/African News Agency (ANA) ?? COSATU president Zingiswa Losi warns that heavy reliance on foreign direct investment will not solve SA’s unemployme­nt problem. |
SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/African News Agency (ANA) COSATU president Zingiswa Losi warns that heavy reliance on foreign direct investment will not solve SA’s unemployme­nt problem. |

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