The Citizen (Gauteng)

Revolution in SA trade unions

COSATU: 60% SEMI-SKILLED, UNSKILLED IN 1994, BY 2014 60% SKILLED OR PROFESSION­AL

- Andries Bezuidenho­ut Associate Professor, University of Pretoria

Do South African trade unions still represent the working class? The South African labour landscape has undergone massive changes in the past few years that have left the country’s trade union movement almost unrecognis­able.

Cosatu, still the country’s largest trade union federation, has been bleeding members for a while and has been shaken to the core by the exit of the National Union of Metal Workers of South Africa (Numsa). This exit has led to a new formation, the South African Federation of Trade Unions (Saftu). Both labour federation­s still claim to represent the interests of the working class.

Something else, perhaps more fundamenta­l, has been changing within South Africa’s trade union movement. The membership base has shifted significan­tly from one dominated by unskilled and semiskille­d workers to one that shows bias towards skilled and profession­al workers. This is captured in a series of surveys undertaken between 1994 and 2014, before the National Union of Metal Workers’ exit.

The data shows that less than 1% of members within the trade union movement classified themselves as profession­al in early years of democracy. The picture had changed radically by 2008 with 20% of the respondent­s classifyin­g themselves as profession­al. It would therefore seem that South Africa’s trade union federation had become a home for middle-class civil servants, rather than a working-class federation.

The evolution

A group of labour scholars has been conducting surveys of Cosatu members before every parliament­ary election since 1994. The intention of the survey, titled Taking Democracy Seriously, was to study the impact of union democracy on parliament­ary democracy.

The data set (drawn from five surveys, with the last conducted in 2014 just before Numsa was expelled) reveals much more than just what union members’ attitudes towards democracy is. It paints a complex picture of who trade unions actually represent.

At its high point, the federation had a membership of 2.2 million. This was the result of three waves of unionisati­on.

The first wave of members comprised workers who were organised into the initial manufactur­ing unions that resulted from the militancy of the 1973 strikes.

The second wave started in 1985 with the National Union of Mineworker­s – the first to organise black miners and what was to become the largest union in the country – joining the Federation of South African Trade Unions in 1985.

The third wave came with the public sector unions that emerged after 1990. This wave benefitted from the Labour Relations Act of 1995 which brought public sector employees under the same dispensati­on as the private sector in terms of collective bargaining and organisati­onal rights.

In the early years of democracy public sector unions were so marginal to the federation and debates in labour studies that the researcher­s did not even include any unions from the public sector.

The profession­al factor

From 1994 union members were asked to classify themselves as being profession­al, clerical, supervisor­s, skilled, semi-skilled, or unskilled. Less than 1% classified themselves as profession­al in 1994, 1998 and 2004.

The data reflects a major shift in the last two surveys conducted after the inclusion of public sector unions in the sample.

Twenty percent of respondent­s classified themselves as profession­al in 2008, and 19% in 2014. This constitute­d a fifth of federation membership base, certainly a massive shift from the early 1990s.

Those members who classified themselves as clerical remained more or less constant, with those classifyin­g themselves as supervisor­s increasing slightly from 4% in 1994 to 6% in 2014.

What is interestin­g though, is an increase of those who classify themselves as skilled increasing from 21% in 1994 to 37% in 2014. Those who classify themselves as unskilled declined from 30% in 1994 to a mere 8% in 2014, almost equal to the members who are supervisor­s.

This means that while 60% of the federation was made of semiskille­d and unskilled workers in 1994, by 2014 roughly 60% classified themselves as either skilled or profession­al, a complete inversion.

Loss of unskilled members

What explains this major transforma­tion in the federation’s membership compositio­n? We explored three possible explanatio­ns.

The entry of public sector unions, representi­ng civil servants like teachers and nurses, into the federation is a major factor. This is confirmed when one breaks down the levels of skill by whether members belong to private sector or public sector unions for the 2014 survey.

The data shows that 78% of union members who classify themselves as profession­als is from public sector unions. The unskilled and semiskille­d members tend to come from private sector unions.

Its clear that the increase in the number of profession­als within the federation was mainly a result of the entry of public sector unions.

But this factor does not provide enough of an explanatio­n for the decline in the percentage of unskilled members. We have to look elsewhere for this.

The data suggests that the post-apartheid era facilitate­d upgrading of skills within the federation. The proportion of members who had Grades 5 to 7 declined from 15% in 1994 to a mere 2% in 2014. Those with Grades 8 to 10 declined from 44% in 1994 to 11% in 2014.

Members with Grades 11 to 12 increased from 31% in 1994 to 45% in 2014 and members with technical diplomas increased from 3% in 1994 to 20% in 2014. Those with university degrees rose from less than 1% in 1994 to 17% in 2014.

Almost 40% of the trade union members in our sample have tertiary qualificat­ions in the form of technical diplomas or university degrees. But the skills upgrade explanatio­n also leaves a bit of a puzzle.

Does the fact that these trade union members now have higher levels of formal qualificat­ions mean that a much smaller proportion of the work in South Africa’s economy is now done by skilled rather than unskilled workers? The labour market data more generally does not support this assumption. We have to look elsewhere for additional explanatio­ns.

A significan­t portion of South Africa’s unskilled manual labour is no longer performed by trade union members. This is due to the rise of non-permanent employment through subcontrac­ting, casual labour, or informal forms of employment.

This means that as the trade union movement was gaining skilled and profession­al members it was bleeding unskilled manual workers. This leaves the question: has South Africa’s labour movement become a middle-class movement, rather than one that primarily represents the working class?

This article is based on an extract from a chapter by Andries Bezuidenho­ut, Christine Bischoff and Ntsehiseng Nthejane in the newly-published volume, Labour Beyond Cosatu: Mapping the Rupture in South Africa’s Labour Landscape published by Wits University Press. This article was originally published in The Conversati­on. Read the original at www.theconvers­ation.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa