South Africa’s labour law architect Mboweni sees need for change
Tito Mboweni, the architect of many of South Africa’s labour laws, said it may be time to review them to ensure they aren’t impeding economic growth.
South Africa’s current finance minister told an investment conference on Thursday that when he served as the first post-apartheid labour minister from 1994 to 1998 “we made a number of mistakes that need to be attended to.”
“To what extent are some of the labour policies we put in place acting as binding constraints?” he said at the conference organized by JSE and sponsored by Citibank and Absa Group. “How do we make sure that our labour laws don’t impinge on the ability of small and medium enterprises to function effectively?”
South Africa’s labour laws have been praised and criticized in turn for protecting workers rights and discouraging hiring in a country where a third of the labour force is unemployed -- in part because of their rigidity.
UNION OPPOSITION
While labour unions would oppose any changes, a commission should perhaps be set up to examine the laws and amend them where necessary, said Mboweni, who also served as central bank governor for a decade.
The minister was adamant the Treasury won’t back down on its insistence that any wage agreement for state workers mustn’t breach the government’s fiscal ceiling -- a stance that’s stoking tension with powerful labour unions allied to the ruling African National Congress.
Last year, the government reneged on a prior deal to raise wages for 1.3-million government workers, and in February Mboweni announced a new three-year pay freeze in the public sector as part of plans to rein in spending, reduce the budget deficit and stabilize debt.
Unions, which are demanding increases of inflation, which averaged 3.3% last year, plus four percentage points, have threatened to strike. Mboweni stressed that workers’ rights would need to be protected.
“Whatever we do, we have to operate within that fiscal framework,” he told the conference. “Whatever arrangements they come to, those arrangements cannot be changed. The fiscal framework is sacrosanct.”
Mboweni also said he would prefer employment incentives to a basic income grant. Social Development Minister Lindiwe Zulu last month said a universal grant proposal will be taken to Cabinet this year, News24 reported.
“On a broader scale there are many people talking about a basic income grant, that has to be debated and we have to find a solution that’s favourable to us,” Mboweni said. “None of us can be happy when our neighbour goes to bed hungry, but also we do not want to create a system which makes people be totally dependent on the State.”
Mboweni praised the State’s recent announcements that it may cede control of South African Airways, the bankrupt national carrier, to private investors, and that companies will be allowed to build their own power plants with up to 100 megawatts of generating capacity without needing a license.
The conference was closed to the media but a recording of Mboweni’s comments was later released by the National Treasury on Twitter.
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