Daily Maverick

Unions table public servants’ wage demands for 2022

Some trade unions are understood to have proposed a wage increase equivalent to consumer inflation – currently 5.7% – plus two percentage points. The increase, which works out to nearly 8%, would be for this year.

- By Ray Mahlaka

From 17 March, trade unions representi­ng South Africa’s 1.2 million public servants started tabling their 2022 wage adjustment demands. In previous years, trade unions were bold and forceful in proposing wage increases above consumer inflation for public servants, including nurses, doctors, police officers, teachers and others. If they didn’t get their way, they threatened to down tools and cripple public services.

But this time, trade unions will begin wage talks without a strong bargaining position. The government has the upper hand after recently scoring a victory against trade unions at the Constituti­onal Court, which will fundamenta­lly affect the collective bargaining process.

The court’s ruling affirmed the government’s right to renege on a collective agreement on wage increases for public servants if it doesn’t have money to comply with the agreement. The last leg of a three-year wage agreement, which proposed increases of about 8% in 2020 for public servants, was declared unlawful by the apex court.

It tossed out the deal because representa­tives of the Department of Public Service and Administra­tion (which is responsibl­e for public sector employment conditions) signed it without the Treasury’s concurrenc­e – and also without knowing if money would even be available to fund these increases.

Wage increase demand for 2022

The wage adjustment negotiatio­ns for 2022 will be tougher than usual for several reasons. The government is set to inform trade unions that their public service members will not be awarded inflation-busting wage increases for the third consecutiv­e year.

Some unions are unwilling to accept this.

The Public Servants Associatio­n of South Africa and trade unions affiliated to labour federation Cosatu informed DM168 that they are still consolidat­ing their wage adjustment demands for 2022.

Consolidat­ing will ensure that unions show a united front when they officially present their demands to the Department of Public Service and Administra­tion and the Treasury. After all, there are about 10 trade unions representi­ng public servants and their demands can be fragmented if they don’t work in a coalition.

DM168 understand­s that some trade unions have proposed a wage increase equivalent to consumer inflation (currently 5.7%) plus two percentage points. The increase, which works out to nearly 8%, would be for a single year (2022).

This is a departure from past practices, as trade unions and the government preferred to conclude a multiyear wage agreement, covering at least three years. Multiyear wage agreements allow the government to plan in finding money to fund wage increases due to public servants. And for trade unions, a multiyear wage agreement, if concluded in good faith, guarantees that the wages of their public servant members will be adjusted, thereby avoiding wage disputes and potential strikes.

Union leaders have argued that the Constituti­onal Court judgment will have the unintended consequenc­e of a multiyear wage agreement being jettisoned by the government any time it doesn’t want to comply with it.

Mugwena Maluleke, the chief wage negotiator for most Cosatu-affiliated unions, said a multiyear wage agreement would be a hard sell, considerin­g workers don’t believe it would be honoured by the government.

It will cost the state

R682.5bn to pay public servants – the largest component of government expenditur­e – leaving little room for funding … service

delivery efforts

Inflation-linked increase

Trade unions want the government to go back to how wage increases were historical­ly structured. Over the past decade, consumer inflation has always been built into the structure of wage adjustment­s – known as “cost of living” increase/adjustment.

Up to two percentage points would be added on top of inflation to reach the final wage adjustment rate. The two percentage points would be for pay progressio­n, which is awarded to public servants for their years of service or performanc­e.

Going back to the old way of calculatin­g wage adjustment­s won’t fly for the Treasury, which plans to meet the unions at the end of March to discuss their demands.Since 2020, the Treasury has been steadfast on a wage freeze for public servants because it wants to slash spending and bring ballooning state debt under control.

It will cost the state R682.5-billion in 2022 to pay public servants – the largest component of government expenditur­e – leaving little room for funding crucial service delivery efforts or pro-economic growth and investment initiative­s.

In terms of wage adjustment­s, all that public servants received in 2020 and 2021 was a 1.5% “pay progressio­n”, which had always been pencilled in by the Treasury.

On top of this adjustment, the Treasury offered public servants an after-tax cash gratuity (or bonus) of R1,000 a month in 2021 to sweeten its offer. The Treasury is prepared to extend the gratuity for another year.

This is all that it is prepared to offer public servants.

 ?? Photo: Alet Pretorius/Gallo Images ?? Workers affiliated to Cosatu during the National Day of Action on 7 October 2021 in Rustenburg.
Photo: Alet Pretorius/Gallo Images Workers affiliated to Cosatu during the National Day of Action on 7 October 2021 in Rustenburg.
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