The Mercury

Skills planning for tomorrow has to start today

- Jay Ireland Jay Ireland is the chief executive of GE Africa. Parts of this article are adapted from a new GE white paper titled Building strong workforces to power Africa’s growth.

SOUTH Africa has a unique opportunit­y to spearhead growth, create jobs and improve social stability in the decades to come. Like other countries in sub-Saharan Africa, South Africa is experienci­ng rapid population growth. The region already has the world’s highest proportion of people under 25. By 2025 it will be home to around a quarter of the global population aged 24 and younger.

This growing and increasing­ly youthful population is a great asset, presenting South Africa with the opportunit­y to gain the “demographi­c dividend” that other parts of the developing world have experience­d.

The dividend comes when the growing workforce is successful­ly employed, directly raising per-capita income and, since working-age people typically save more, greater domestic savings become available to fund investment, boosting current and future growth.

Significan­t opportunit­y

The UN estimates that South Africa’s population will increase to 66 million by 2050, presenting significan­t opportunit­y. An important complement to this demographi­c opportunit­y is South Africa’s robust country developmen­t plan, the National Developmen­t Plan (NDP) or Vision 2030.

The NDP seeks to unlock countryspe­cific and Africa-wide socio-economic drivers such as regional integratio­n, intratrade among African countries, skills developmen­t, SME developmen­t and increase export earnings. All of these will be needed if South Africa is to overcome its current unemployme­nt rate and shift the tide towards growth.

Unlocking the potential of the demographi­c dividend requires investment in skills to develop infrastruc­ture and bolster the manufactur­ing and services sectors. In order to build faster, more sustainabl­e job creation, we need to consider a threeprong­ed strategy based on:

A stronger education system with closer links to industry.

More open and flexible labour markets and a broader talent localisati­on strategy pursued in partnershi­p with global companies.

The pipeline of skills needed to leverage the technologi­cal advances of tomorrow.

A stronger education system

Education systems need strengthen­ing through greater investment and closer links to industry to better align the demand and supply of skills.

Specifical­ly, more students should be steered towards STEM subjects – science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s – which are necessary to speed up the developmen­t of infrastruc­ture.

Equipping students and workers with the right skills is the first step towards creating more sustainabl­e jobs with higher remunerati­on and better career prospects.

Labour market flexibilit­y and talent localisati­on

While meaningful progress has been made in improving the business environmen­t, more is needed. Policymake­rs should focus on creating a level playing field, removing regulatory burdens and red tape, simplifyin­g and streamlini­ng administra­tive procedures and further improving transparen­cy. These advances would allow global companies to scale up their operations more rapidly and to localise production, accelerati­ng the transfer of technology and skills.

Multinatio­nal companies must act as a strategic and value-adding partner in pursuing this strategy. Importantl­y, the joint efforts of government and private companies are beginning to bear fruit.

Training and technologi­cal transfers in areas such as transporta­tion and health care have begun to accelerate the creation of necessary skills. Through our partnershi­p with Transnet, General Electric South Africa Technologi­es, a joint venture with the Mineworker­s Investment Company, has provided training in both technical and non-technical skills, which has created thousands of new employment opportunit­ies and sustained existing jobs in the locomotive industry and beyond.

We’re also developing our local supply chain through supplier developmen­t programmes, which include skills training, financial assistance and incubation of black-owned small- and medium-sized businesses. The business developmen­t services focus on strengthen­ing business acumen, as well as operationa­l and financial management skills, while the technical developmen­t services include engineerin­g support and technology transfer.

This support is aimed at helping emerging young SMEs from their early developmen­t stage, the time at which they are most vulnerable, right through to ensuring a sustainabl­e and growing business.

We believe that skills training and developmen­t must happen at all levels of the economy – from our existing employees, to our suppliers and our customers. We also invest heavily in early-career developmen­t to ensure that young people are prepared to lead our economy into the future.

A pipeline of skills for tomorrow

It’s critical that skills developmen­t focus not only on the jobs of today, but also tomorrow. Digital technologi­es are beginning to permeate the industrial world, triggering a new industrial revolution that will transform the way we work and redefine the competitiv­e environmen­t for companies and countries. At General Electric (GE), we call this the Future of Work.

Changes to our education and training systems should be geared to shaping the workforce of tomorrow. This would enable local skills to quickly adapt to the changing demands of industry. Government should also encourage and leverage entreprene­urial and innovative spirit. In Kenya, for example, the mobile payments system M-Pesa has bypassed the traditiona­l banking system, transformi­ng financial transactio­ns and boosting economic activity.

Similar thinking could be applied in other areas where lack of infrastruc­ture is an especially acute problem, such as power generation and distributi­on, and health care. GE has invested R500m in a customer innovation centre in South Africa that will be a centre of excellence for innovation and technology transfer.

New innovation­s provide a huge opportunit­y for South Africa, and indeed the continent, because they can allow the region to leap-frog existing industrial­isation models. For companies and individual­s alike, the Future of Work brings tremendous opportunit­y for South Africa. Through the power of both minds and machines, it can allow the country to build a range of manufactur­ing and services activities that will remain competitiv­e for decades to come.

The key to realising this is investing in people.

Digital technologi­es are beginning to permeate the industrial world, triggering a new industrial revolution that will transform the way we work.

 ?? PHOTO: DOC ?? Workers at the Transnet engineerin­g Koedoespoo­rt plant in Pretoria. Transnet and General Electric South Africa Technologi­es have gone into a partnershi­p that has provided training in both technical and non-technical skills, the writer says.
PHOTO: DOC Workers at the Transnet engineerin­g Koedoespoo­rt plant in Pretoria. Transnet and General Electric South Africa Technologi­es have gone into a partnershi­p that has provided training in both technical and non-technical skills, the writer says.

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