Sunday Times

Immigratio­n and private sector training vital to growth, stability

South Africa must recruit skills as fast as possible, writes

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SOUTH Africa’s failure to develop a functional skills pipeline is a major contributo­r to the country’s stagnant growth and political instabilit­y.

The shortage of skilled, experience­d people across the economy (artisans, managers, profession­als) constrains business expansion and contribute­s to sluggish growth.

Skills shortages also contribute heavily to South Africa’s burden of inequality. Skilled people in South Africa have scarcity value. Those with the tertiary education that is the entry point for many of the jobs created by our failing growth path command a high earnings premium.

The salary differenti­al between those within this charmed circle and the less skilled is much higher in South Africa than in other comparable middle-income developing countries. Ratings agencies and investors regularly flag inequality and exclusion as medium-term threats to stability, and skills shortages drive these concerns. How have things come to this? There are two ways of acquiring a broad and deep skills pool. The most important is to equip your own citizens with knowledge and skills and the ability to use them productive­ly. The second is to compensate for shortages and adapt to swiftly moving economic developmen­ts by recruiting from abroad.

Most successful economies combine these approaches. Increasing­ly it is not only traditiona­l immigrant societies (the US, Canada, Australia) that incorporat­e skilled immigratio­n into their skills mix. Emerging economies such as Chile, Brazil, Singapore and even China are beginning to do so. South Africa has been bad at both. The inadequaci­es of the poorly functionin­g basic education system are recognised, including by the government. At many public schools, little effective learning takes place, resulting in high dropout rates from schools and post-school institutio­ns, low pass rates and poorly skilled graduates.

In terms of raw numbers, tertiary education is a post-apartheid success story. The number of people in the workforce with degrees more than doubled between 1995 and 2011 and the number of diplomas held increased 99%.

By 2015, there were 4.1 million people (11.4%) in the workforce with some kind of tertiary qualificat­ion.

However, our skills pool remains quite shallow for a country with aspiration­s to a high-skill growth path: the average for OECD countries is 33% and for some it is as high as 55%.

In 2011 in the G20, which includes many of South Africa’s middle-income peers, 40% of people between 25 and 34 years old had tertiary qualificat­ions.

The distributi­on of qualificat­ions by field is critical: in 2013, 40% of China’s and 35% of India’s graduates were in the fields of science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s. In 2014-15, the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiv­eness Report ranked South Africa 102nd out of 144 countries for availabili­ty of scientists and engineers.

The distributi­on of qualificat­ions between university studies and technical and vocational education and training is vital. The government’s 2012 white paper on post-school education and training acknowledg­ed the shortage of mid-level technical and artisan skills and promised a policy shift towards expanding numbers in technical and vocational education and training.

Student numbers have duly expanded but without the necessary expansion in the number of lecturers and capacity. At least 25% of lecturers in the sector have no teaching qualificat­ions, more than half have no industry experience and few have experience of working as artisans.

Skilled immigratio­n is the obvious resort to supplement our skills pool.

Every president, deputy president and minister of home affairs since 2001 has pledged to increase the number of foreign skills entering the country, but these commitment­s have not been matched by the political will to deliver. Which is why the green paper on internatio­nal migration (August 2016) finds itself repeating these pledges.

What should be done? NEED MORE: The number of people in the workforce with degrees more than doubled between 1995 and 2011

Reform in basic education already centres on improving teacher effectiven­ess through quality teacher education, performanc­e assessment and capacity building. Progress is slow in the face of obstructiv­e teacher unions.

Universiti­es need a period of consolidat­ion and respite from relentless expansion on inadequate resources.

For technical and vocational education and training, it will be important to improve the supply and quality of instructor­s at public colleges, especially by recruiting those with workplace experience. However, upgrading purely public delivery will not be enough.

What is required is a drastic opening up to private sector provision, the potential of which has been viewed with official suspicion and even hostility. China’s remarkably open and varied vocational system is an inspiratio­n.

Provision for skills training in China is a vibrant mix of provision by government (54% of colleges), private sector (23%), industry associatio­ns (15%) and state-owned enterprise­s (7%).

This has helped to align training with the needs of specific industries and facilitate workplace links.

Improving the public sector and opening the system to diversity and private sector resources will require more assertive, better-resourced contributi­ons from organised business.

Educationa­l reform takes time and in this landscape, skilled immigratio­n promises more immediate and costeffect­ive dividends. The government’s recent green paper on managing internatio­nal migration shows welcome openness to criticisms of past policy.

However, instead of moving on to propose bold reforms it tends to propose desirable change and then promptly strangles it with a list of bureaucrat­ic requiremen­ts.

One example is the proposal for a points system for skilled immigrants, incorporat­ing a wide range of “special requiremen­ts” for South African conditions.

This will become a bureaucrat­ic playground in which recruitmen­t initiative­s will come to a halt.

This is just not good enough for a country that is, in the green paper’s words, “desperatel­y short of skills”.

We need a stronger approach that recognises our urgent need to recruit skilled people across the board as quickly as possible.

Before any of this can happen, however, there has to be a commitment of political attention and will at the highest level to face up to the politics of skilled immigratio­n.

Without this, all the declaratio­ns in the green paper will go the way of every promise of the past 17 years.

Bernstein is head of the Centre for Developmen­t and Enterprise

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