Cape Times

Business pushes for greater job creation in South Africa

- SIPHELELE DLUDLA siphelele.dludla@inl.co.za

BUSINESS is pushing the government to develop specific interventi­ons that will enable greater job creation in specific sectors of the economy and fast-track the implementa­tion of the Jobs Summit resolution­s amid high unemployme­nt.

President of Business Unity South Africa, Sipho Pityana, speaking at the Harambee Youth Employment Accelerato­r’s 6th Solutions Exchange for Youth Employment conference in Johannesbu­rg, said yesterday that business believed President Cyril Ramaphosa’s administra­tion understood the challenges.

Bottleneck­s such as simplifyin­g the visa regime, water use licensing issues, export taxes, releasing broadband spectrum and youth unemployme­nt, were major concerns for business, he said. Business confidence has waned and is at a 20-year low as more business people are growing more pessimisti­c about the future as the economy stagnates.

At the same time, youth unemployme­nt is at its highest. The unemployme­nt rate among the 15- to 24-age group was 55.2 percent in the first quarter of 2019.

Minister of Employment and Labour Thulas Nxesi, addressing concerns, said that the government was implementi­ng a comprehens­ive plan which sought to address five key challenges over the next five years, in partnershi­p with the private sector, to unlock the energy and potential of young people. He said that these included abolishing work experience as a requiremen­t for entry-level posts in the public service and an expanded National Youth Service.

“The scale of youth unemployme­nt requires bold and urgent action. It requires innovative solutions, extraordin­ary effort, and an end to business as usual. It requires deep collaborat­ion between the public and private sectors, and decisive measures to make the government work for young people,” Nxesi said.

Ptyana also said that Monday’s meeting of the Presidenti­al Working Committee on the Jobs Summit had proved to business that Ramaphosa understood and took seriously the challenges that plagued the economy.

Business was one of the biggest campaigner­s for the removal of Ramaphosa’s predecesso­r, former president Jacob Zuma, whose administra­tion was plagued by allegation­s of graft and corruption. The meetings of the Presidenti­al Working Committee are meant to develop specific interventi­ons that will enable greater job creation in specific sectors and also provide detailed updates on a month-to-month basis on those interventi­ons.

“We had very tough exchanges and we’ve been very frank that we don’t want to be on the talk shops. We don’t want to place issues on the table and then nothing happens,” Pityana said.

“There is a desire to make the social partnershi­p work. The president is very receptive to business and I think having been on both sides of the spectrum, business has to know that this is a president who is more engaging with business than any other.

“With President Ramaphosa, there is something about wanting to know what you think, wanting to know where solutions and suggestion­s are. It actually puts pressure on business not to be a passive bystander.

“And business will lose that opportunit­y at its own peril and you can’t take that for granted. When things don’t move we should take as much blame as the president, because we are now placed in a different position.”

He said that he had been “very cynical” about the establishm­ent of the Ministry of Employment, but later decided that business and the government needed to leverage what already exists in the system.

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