The Mercury

The youth employment opportunit­y certificat­e will empower jobless South Africans

- MAT CUTHBERT Mat Cuthbert is the DA’s head of policy. He is writing in response to the Business Report article, which appeared last week, by Solly Phetoe.

THE critique levelled at the DA’s proposal to empower millions of young, jobless South Africans through a Youth Employment Opportunit­y Certificat­e (YEOC) has exposed how out of touch Cosatu is with the reality.

The truth is that South Africa is facing a man-made unemployme­nt crisis. At 41%, the world’s highest unemployme­nt rate is dwarfed only by the highest youth unemployme­nt rate in the world at 71%. While government officials often cite external shocks such as the global financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic as the culprits, the rest of the world – both emerging and developed – has rebounded mainly from these disruption­s. SA has all but done so, and in 2024, the real number of employed remains tragically similar to 2008, despite a near-doubling of our population.

Well-intentione­d but misguided labour policies engineered by the ANC-Cosatu-SACP’s “unholy alliance” have throttled investment, put a handbrake on growth and resulted in an ever-growing unemployme­nt queue.

Depending on a country’s market structure, introducin­g wage regulation­s

may positively impact employment. However, this is not the case in South Africa. Dealing with the unemployme­nt crisis will require the government to acknowledg­e that enabling regulation and legislatio­n must be in place so that South Africans wishing to enter the labour market are not legally prevented from doing so.

Small businesses, which support more than 60% of all jobs in the country, are particular­ly crucial in this context. The labour laws that burden large companies are even more restrictiv­e for small enterprise­s, especially in industries where the labour minister enforces “sectoral determinat­ions”. This practice permits the government to extend a minimum wage agreement, or wages negotiated between unions and businesses at a bargaining council, to an entire sector – regardless of whether affected businesses participat­ed in the council’s proceeding­s.

Rather than being profit-driven corporate tycoons focused solely on maximising shareholde­r returns, many small business owners are local entreprene­urs seeking to utilise their skills and provide jobs within their communitie­s. They often operate on tight margins and struggle to navigate increasing­ly complex and burdensome labour regulation­s. This is a critical issue because the small business sector is the most prominent employer in the country, and lowering our unemployme­nt rate will require many more of them.

Suppose the cost of labour exceeds the value added by an employee. In that case, it becomes economical­ly unviable for a business to maintain a profitable position without sacrificin­g other aspects of its operations, considerin­g that small businesses lack the financial flexibilit­y to absorb arbitrary increases in labour costs. The only sensible response would be to either reduce headcount, stop expanding and diversifyi­ng its workforce, or cut hours – the alternativ­e would be to close the doors.

Unfortunat­ely, the “unholy alliance” has chosen to ignore this fundamenta­l economic reality. Consequent­ly, millions are locked out from employment and either earn nothing or are “employed” at around R2 an hour through the SRD grant.

It is a myth that the YOEC is the first step towards abolishing the minimum wage, which will remain at its current level. This certificat­e is a completely voluntary option for the unemployed for 12 months or more, allowing them to negotiate a wage below the minimum r.

Existing workers will be unaffected. The YEOC is about empowering those earning nothing due to prolonged unemployme­nt. If someone desires to break out of this cycle by accepting a lower wage, government restrictio­ns should not prevent them from doing so. This is about the freedom of both job seekers and employers to reach mutually beneficial agreements.

All employers who employ a YEOC holder will also be required to provide workers with formal skills developmen­t training, which the National Skills Authority will oversee. This will ensure that these job seekers are absorbed into the workforce and upskilled for the future.

This is how the YEOC will remedy the issue. It highlights the importance of market-driven wage determinat­ion and sidesteps the negative consequenc­es of top-down statist policies that prioritise the unholy alliance’s interests at the expense of workers, consumers and entreprene­urs.

The unintended consequenc­es of government­al wage controls, which were touted as a safeguard for the vulnerable, have robbed countless young people of earning a living. They have shielded employed workers from competitio­n and left the jobless behind. Without these curbs, lower-skilled workers, small businesses and households would be able to flourish.

 ?? ?? DEALING with the unemployme­nt crisis will require government to acknowledg­e that enabling regulation and legislatio­n must be in place so that South Africans wishing to enter the labour market are not legally prevented from doing so. | HENK KRUGER Independen­t Newspapers.
DEALING with the unemployme­nt crisis will require government to acknowledg­e that enabling regulation and legislatio­n must be in place so that South Africans wishing to enter the labour market are not legally prevented from doing so. | HENK KRUGER Independen­t Newspapers.

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