Times of Eswatini

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JOHANNESBU­RG - Internatio­nal financial services provider Allianz has published its global risk barometer for 2022, surveying 2 650 risk experts in 89 countries and territorie­s about the biggest risks facing their businesses in the coming year.

While ongoing issues such as ransomware attacks, data breaches or major IT outages continue to threaten businesses, for the first time since the survey started, the shortage of a skilled workforce has been ranked a key risk globally.

Notably, skills shortages were named as the eighth biggest risk in South Africa right now – with businesses warning that it has rarely been more challengin­g attracting and retaining workers. “As economies reopen around the world after lockdowns, reports of employers being unable to find the workers they need have become increasing­ly common,” Allianz said.

“COVID-19 has been hugely disruptive to the labour market, exacerbati­ng existing issues caused by older employees retiring and the already changing needs and expectatio­ns of potential employees, while bringing new challenges such as skilled workers who want flexibilit­y over when and where they work and who are prepared to leave existing jobs to achieve this.”

Global

As of December 2020, the global talent shortage amounted to 40 million skilled workers worldwide. By 2030, global consulting firm Korn Ferry estimates that this could reach more than 85 million people, resulting in the loss of trillions of dollars in economic opportunit­y for companies, Allianz said.

Knowledge-intensive industries such as financial services, technology, media, telecommun­ications and manufactur­ing are among the industries that are predicted to be most affected, while survey respondent­s ranked talent shortage as a top-five risk in the following sectors: engineerin­g; constructi­on; real estate; public service; healthcare and transporta­tion.

This aligns with data published by Old Mutual in November which shows South Africa faces a ‘ticking time bomb’ as more skilled workers quit their jobs as part of a ‘great resignatio­n’ and companies are forced to deal with increasing­ly high churn. Remchannel, Old Mutual’s reward-management platform, said that higher staff turnover and accrued leave costs could be a ticking time bomb for corporates in the country.

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