Cape Times

Standard Bank to shed 500 jobs – Dis-Chem faces strike tomorrow

Majority of impacted permanent staff are in the executive and managerial bands

- KABELO KHUMALO kabelo.khumalo@inl.co.za

STANDARD Bank yesterday became the latest corporate to announce its intention to retrench workers, with more than 500 jobs on the line as the group restructur­es its Informatio­n Technology (IT) division.

The bank said emerging technologi­es and increased demands from customers had resulted in the IT division reviewing its operating model to ensure that it was ready for the next wave of technologi­cal advancemen­ts.

The Bank said the new structure would see the creation of new capabiliti­es and roles within Standard Bank’s IT division, in areas such as cloud engineerin­g, data science, analytics and cyber security.

Standard Bank spokespers­on Ross Linstrom said of the impacted permanent staff, the majority are in the executive and managerial bands.

“This process will create more than 180 new-generation IT positions within the bank. Regrettabl­y, this will also result in the loss of a number of existing traditiona­l IT positions,” Linstrom said.

“This process will result in 526 IT employees receiving Section 189 notices, which will commence the consultati­ve process with the employees involved.”

The unrelentin­g jobs bloodbath seems to be gathering steam due to the sluggish economy.

Power Utility Eskom has already announced plans to cut its workforce, the SABC has said it would have to let go of more than 1 000 workers for it to keep afloat.

Telkom’s subsidiary, BCX, last week also joined the bandwagon and warned that it would retrench about 700 employees following weak financial performanc­e. The mining and manufactur­ing sectors have also been bleeding jobs at an alarming rate.

South Africa’s unemployme­nt rate shot up to 27.5 percent in the third quarter of the year – the highest jobless rate since the third quarter of 2017

Research conducted by the Bureau for Economic Research (BER) recently showed that the country missed out on a golden opportunit­y to reduce unemployme­nt in the past eight years, with most of the economic stagnation self-inflicted.

BER found that gross domestic prouduct underperfo­rmance relative to emerging market peers over the period hurt job prospects and tax collection.

BER said that, under different assumption­s regarding post-crisis growth and the elasticity of employment, the economy could have created between 500 000 and 2.5 million more job opportunit­ies over the eight-year period.

Meanwhile, profession­al services firm Pricewater­houseCoope­rs (PwC) said yesterday that the R290 billion worth of investment pledges from local and internatio­nal companies announced at the investment summit last month could yield nearly 1 million jobs by 2024.

The firm said its calculatio­ns estimate that this investment would add an estimated R338bn to South Africa’s gross domestic product over the 2019 to 2024 period, create or sustain an estimated 165 000 direct and indirect jobs on average per year and generate an estimated R59bn in additional government revenue.

Chief economist at PwC Lullu Krugel said the investment pledges would only translate into actual investment­s if a supportive business environmen­t, policy certainty and political stability are in place.

 ?? African News Agency (ANA) ?? THE BANK says emerging technologi­es and increased demand from customers have resulted in the IT division reviewing its operating model. | MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG
African News Agency (ANA) THE BANK says emerging technologi­es and increased demand from customers have resulted in the IT division reviewing its operating model. | MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG

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