Category Archives: household

State swells ranks as job losses grow

Almost 50000 people joined South Africa’s growing ranks of the unemployed in the first six months of this year, as the embattled economy continued to bleed jobs in critical sectors like mining and manufacturing Adcorp reported yesterday.

But while employment in the private sector shrunk, government employment swelled by 6.2% in the same period.

“The public sector now accounts for all the job creation in the economy for 2011 as a whole,” says Adcorp labour market analyst Loane Sharp, adding that last month’s employment decline was sharpest in the manufacturing (19.9%), mining (19.3%) and construction (16%) sectors.

One glimmer of hope comes from the unofficial sector, which continued to create jobs, says Sharp.

In August the sector employed 16 917 additional people, enhancing the “informalisation” of the country’s workforce,” he says.

But the harsh reality is that each job lost by a breadwinner has a devastating knock-on effect on the people who depend on them, says Brait chief economist Colen Garrow.

“It is deeply hurting every time people lose their jobs because one lay-off may affect five to eight family members,” said

“For poor families the result of a lost job by a breadwinner will even derail the education of the young ones. Without any doubt, the deteriorating of job losses situation will push a number of families into deep poverty, added Garrow.

The continuing haemorrhaging of jobs in the SA economy is highlighted in the August Adcorp Employment Index.

It reveals that the mining, manufacturing and construction sectors, all key drivers of the economy, shed jobs at double-digit rates, leading to calls by economists for urgent corrective action.

The authoritative reports blame the crowding by government of private sector participation in the economy as one reason for SA’s dismal employment picture.

The loss of 50000 jobs within six months is seen as a catastrophe by economic observers, especially as it comes on top of the more than 1 million jobs already lost during the ongoing financial crisis.

The Adcorp index overall employment declined by 2.1% in August, the fourth consecutive monthly decline.

It warns that employment conditions remain “exceedingly weak”, suggesting that the prospect of an improvement in permanent jobs was a long way off.

Garrow said it was difficult to see how government could reach its ambitious target of creating 5million jobs by 2020.

While the New Growth Path (NGP) targeted unskilled and semiskilled workers, the sectors it targeted were precisely the ones that were shedding jobs, notably manufacturing and mining.

“It’s abundantly clear that for the economy to grow at a more respectable pace, a drastic rethink is required on the labour market,” he said.

“Scrapping the minimum wage to get more people actively involved in the economy, is a start and long overdue.”

Econometrix chief economist, Tony Twine, said that both the manufacturing and mining sectors had been through turbulent and uncertain times.

It was not surprising they were not rushing out to hire people and expanding their workforce, he said.

“We are faced with the paradox that these sectors have been identified to absorb labour, just at the time when their employment levels are falling.”

But, Chris Hart, Investment Solutions chief economist, argued that the main reason for the lack of job creation was that labour laws were too hostile to small business and “very obstructive” to creating jobs.

“One of the biggest problems is that there is too much policy uncertainty, particularly in the mining and agricultural sectors – something which investors shy away from.

“The solution for this problem is simple. The government must aim at creating 20 million jobs in five years, instead of the projected 5 million jobs in the next 10 years,” Hart said.

Article courtesy of The New Age – for the original article, please click here


Economists warn of tough times ahead

South Africans have barely recovered from the grim 2008 global recession and economists are advising that the end is not in sight.

In fact, as European countries such as Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain struggle to keep their economies afloat and the US debates elements of legislation to reduce its deficit and raise the debt ceiling by August, local economists are painting a bleak picture of a double-dip recession.

Chris Hart, an economist at Investment Solutions, says slow growth in Europe, Asia and the US in the previous quarter is a sign that the world is heading back into the recession.

“My biggest worry, in that context of a slowdown, is that we are having strikes, and we are likely to struggle in the third quarter,” he said.

“If not for the strength of the rand, we would be much worse off.”

Lullu Krugel, a senior economist at KPMG, said the economy was dependent on the health of the average consumer because more than 60% of gross domestic product was contributed by spending in sectors such as retail, banking and property.

“The pace of inflation increases has also quickened, with food inflation, increases in fuel prices [although there has been some relief of late] and electricity price increases hitting the pocket of the consumer,” she said.

Inflation, combined with job losses and lower pay increases by employers to reduce the number of potential retrenchments, had led to the South African consumer – already deeply indebted – feeling even greater pressure, Krugel said.

Several major companies are consulting unions about restructuring of their businesses that will inevitably lead to job losses.

Loane Sharp, Adcorp’s labour market analyst, said big private-sector companies would be worst hit by the retrenchment tide this year, with the government and its parastatals unlikely to shed jobs.

Retail giant Pick n Pay is the first, with plans to retrench 3000 employees.

Announcing the retrenchments last week, operations director Neal Quirk said the decision was motivated by declining profitability and loss of market share.

“We’ve worked hard at looking at possible alternatives that may reduce the number of full-time people affected and these options will be discussed during our consultation process with the union,” he said.

Azar Jammine, a chief economist at Econometrix, said he did not anticipate a major downturn in domestic economic growth over the next 18 months, barring a double- dip recession in the world economy, which could not be ruled out.

The fears come on the back of Adcorp’s Employment Index, released on Monday, that showed 127000 permanent jobs and about 5712 temporary jobs were lost last month.

While Japan’s growth has been slowed by the tsunami, economists predict that countries like the US and Italy will take a few years to recover from the 2008 recession because of sovereign debt – money owed by their central banks.

Economists say pressure on the South African economy is intensified by:

  • An increase in inflation, caused by exorbitant electricity tariff hikes and petrol price increases, among others;
  • Companies selling off some of their assets to finance debt, which caused the 2008 recession;
  • Over-indebtedness of consumers; and
  • Foreign companies’ reluctance to invest in a country where there is political tension and demanding labour unions.

Ronel Oberholzer, a senior economist from IHS Global Insight, said South Africa’s recovery from the 2008 recession was hampered by its lack of competitiveness, a result of “increasingly militant and demanding trade union activity”.

“When investors are presented with a choice between investing in an economy with rising political and social tension and a labour force that presents significant disruption to the economy and demands double-digit wage increases (even if they are justified) or an economy with weak unions, cheap semi-skilled labour and an environment that is conducive to attracting investment, most investors would pick the latter.

“Unfortunately, there are numerous countries which fall into the latter category, and they are the ones that are experiencing high growth rates since the recession,” she said.

Lew Geffen, the chairman of Sotheby’s International Realty, said his group had lost 20% in profits in the quarter ending in June.

He said the situation was replicated across the property sector, which was suffering from a soccer World Cup hangover.

“Our economy does not seem to be picking up as much as it should be, and this is also because of the strikes, the National Credit Act and political utterances from certain people – that has caused jitters in the market.”

Article via Times Live – click here to see original article


SA unions have a ‘death wish’, says economist

As employees in the chemicals sector joined metalworkers in their strike on Monday, there were fears that petrol stations could run out of fuel. 

Colen Garrow, economist at international investment group Brait, told the Mail & Guardian on Monday that while there may be widespread shortages, it depended on how long the strike lasted.

The countrywide strike in the engineering sector entered its second week on Sunday.

“At the very most at this stage I would predict bottlenecks at petrol stations as motorists rush to fill their tanks,” Garrow said.

The effect of the strike on the South African economy was already taking hold, with third-quarter GDP growth predictions being revised downwards.

Chief economist at Investment Solutions Chris Hart told the M&G that while the bulk of the strain caused by the recession had been weathered by the South African economy, the current industrial action would have a negative effect.

“The global economy is showing signs of slowing and the threats to our continued recovery are being exacerbated by the strike action. We have done all we can in terms of lowering interest rates and widening the budget deficit and this could drag us back down,” Hart said.

This was echoed by economist Richard Downing, who believed organised labour must realise that increased wages will lead to further unemployment, saying it was as if the unions had a “death wish”.

“The economy is not that resilient and business just can’t afford these increases. Unions must know what is affordable and grapple with the facts. If these increases go through unemployment will increase. It’s a simple equation,” said Downing.

The Chemical, Energy, Paper, Printing, Wood, and Allied Workers’ Union (Ceppwawu) and General Industries Workers’ Union of South Africa (Giwusa) last week indicated that their members would embark on the strike from Monday.

The unions were joining the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (Numsa), the Metal and Electrical Workers’ Union (Mewusa), United Association of South Africa (Uasa), Solidarity and the South African Equity Workers’ Association (Saewa).

Article via Mail&Guardian – click here to view original article


Labour

One dead, six injured, nine arrested in countrywide strikes

A worker died, six were injured, and nine arrested during the country-wide strikes this week.

The engineering, gold, chemicals, and coal sectors were negotiating with employers for higher wages.

During the engineering sector strike a worker died when he was hit by a car in Germiston, National Union of Metalworkers of SA (Numsa) spokesman Castro Ngobese said on Friday.

Two people were injured when a supervisor at an engineering company in Krugersdorp shot at striking protesters who were assaulting working employees on Friday, Gauteng police said.

The supervisor and the two protesters, who were taken to hospital, were arrested.

Four Numsa members were also injured after police fired rubber bullets during a strike in Krugersdorp, west of Johannesburg on Thursday.

There were also claims that police had harassed, intimidated, and shot at strikers in Bellville and Germiston.

Numsa and the Congress of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu) condemned the “police brutality” and called on Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa and National Police Commissioner Bheki Cele to take “drastic action” against the policemen.

However, the Steel and Engineering Industries’ Federation of SA (Seifsa) said pockets of strikers were moving from company to company to find and intimidate non-strikers, damaging property, and trespassing.

Ekurhuleni metro police said nine Numsa members were arrested for public violence in Germiston on Thursday.

Constable Mashudu Phatela said they were allegedly burning tyres and throwing stones at passing motorists.

Over 117,000 workers in the metal and engineering sector downed tools on Monday in pursuit of between 10 and 13 percent wage increases. Employers were offering seven percent.

Workers were striking in Johannesburg, Port Elizabeth, East London, and Cape Town. Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal workers held demonstrations on Monday, while workers in the Free State and Northern Cape started their work stoppage on Tuesday.

Numsa, which represents about 120,000 workers, was joined by five other trade unions — the Chemical, Energy, Paper, Printing, Wood, and Allied Workers’ Union (Ceppwawu), the Metal and Electrical Workers’ Union (Mewusa), United Association of SA (Uasa), Solidarity, and the SA Equity Workers’ Association (Saewa).

Cosatu president Sdumo Dlamini on Wednesday said the engineering sector strike was only the beginning of workers’ fight for a living wage.

Economist Chris Hart on Friday said strikes over wage negotiations were becoming routine, which suggested there was policy and regulation failure.

The violence associated with South Africa’s strikes also had an implication.

“The violence suggests that there is a lack of control which is not good for investment,” he said.

“Labour instability does nothing for job creation; if anything it damages it from an investment point of view.”

Two “victims” arose from non-productivity during strikes. The customer, who ended up paying more, and the unemployed, he said.

The protests by workers also reduced South Africa’s competitiveness with the rest of world.

The solution was productive negotiations between unions and employers, Hart said.

“…but we [South Africa] are not there yet.”

About 5000 Ceppwawu members went on strike on Tuesday over a salary dispute.

The union wanted a 13 percent salary increase on the grounds of rising daily costs.

The gold and coal sectors declared disputes with their employees over wage negotiations.

The Chamber of Mines was negotiating on behalf of employers in both sectors.

Workers in the gold sector threatened to go on strike next week if wage negotiations with the chamber came to a deadlock.

The National Union of Mineworker (NUM), Uasa, and Solidarity were representing unionised employees working for chamber member companies such as AngloGold Ashanti, Harmony Gold, and Goldfields.

The NUM and Uasa hoped to raise the chamber’s offer from 4.2 to 14 percent. Solidarity members wanted 12 percent.

Solidarity said it submitted the lower figure in light of the current production environment and 4.6 percent consumer price inflation.

It felt the figure, although still above inflation, would help retain skilled employees.

Although inflation was at 4.6 percent, workers faced hefty electricity and rates increases, food price increases, and the imminent introduction of road tolls.

The chamber recently said production in the gold mining industry had consistently declined and it faced pressure from the high costs of electricity, water, and fuel.

Chamber negotiator Elize Strydom said it had increased its offer to five percent for the lowest paid employees and 4.5 percent for the rest.

The coal sector started salary talks on Thursday.

Coal companies have offered a 4.5 percent increase for the lowest category employees and 4.2 percent for all others.

A full-blown strike in the petroleum and pharmaceuticals sector will kick off on Monday, Ceppwawu said.

About 70,000 workers are expected to go on strike.

This would include members of the General Industries Workers’ Union of SA (Giwusa) and the Tissue and Allied Union.

Workers wanted a wage increase of 11 to 13 percent across the board and a minimum wage of R6000 a month.

Article via The New Age – click here to see original article

 


Ever-higher fuel prices on the horizon, say analysts

While the price of petrol will drop back below R10 next week, analysts are predicting price hikes for the rest of 2011.

Motorists should not celebrate the announcement of a decrease in fuel prices and prepare for significant hikes for the remainder of 2011, analysts said on Friday.

The energy department announced a decrease of 33c a litre in 93 unleaded petrol (ULP) and lead replacement petrol (LRP) from next Wednesday, along with a drop of 31c a litre in 95 ULP and LRP petrol.

Accordingly 93 octane fuel will retail at R9.62 a litre at the coast and R9.92 in Gauteng. This marks the first drop back to below R10 a litre since May.

The petrol decrease was coupled with drops of 11c and 12c a litre in diesel fuel with 0.05% to 0.005% sulphur content respectively, as well as a decrease of 12c a litre in the wholesale price of illuminating paraffin.

“The fuel price will be depressed for the moment but expect it to bounce back quickly as international oil prices stabilise,” chief economist at Investment Solutions, Chris Hart told theMail & Guardian.

“The strong rand will allow for some further respite, but as the local currency weakens towards the end of 2011, consumers should expect fuel increases,” Hart added.

This sentiment was echoed by Jeff Gable, chief analyst at Absa Capital, who also believes the South African public should prepare for higher prices of fuel due to ever-escalating oil prices.

“Prices are going to escalate from here and over time we are going to have to get used to petrol prices in double figures,” Gable told the Mail & Guardian.

Article via Mail&Guardian – click here to view original article


Big fat Greek debt headache

If Greek sovereign debt collapses nobody will be collecting souvenirs from a fall that could be bigger than the Berlin Wall…

MICHAEL ETTERSHANK

According to Chris Hart from Investment Solutions the biggest event in Europe since the fall of the Berlin Wall is going to be the dismantling of the welfare state with the collapse of Greek sovereign debt.

 

 

 

 

“European governments have made promises beyond what the wealth of their taxpayers can deliver,” said Mr Hart in an interview on Summit TV. “The people are now asking their governments to meet their promises.”

 

 

 

 

It’s a well documented fact the Greeks invented the word democracy, so perhaps there is an irony that it’s now come home to haunt them.

 

 

 

 

“The troubles in Greece can in no small part be attributed to the politics of Europe – the problem is that the Greek electorate do not want to participate in austerity measures,” said Mr Hart.

 

 

 

 

German voters don’t really want to bail out their fellow Europeans based on perceptions of a diluted work ethic to the south.

 

 

 

 

“In Greece it’s almost a political death wish is you support the austerity measures that are needed,” said Mr Hart, “but if you support the bail-out packages in Germany you’re also dead politically.”

 

 

 

 

What this means is the external support to keep Greece afloat is falling away, and so is internal support.

 

 

 

 

 

 

According to Mr Hart it’s in the nature of politics that elections are auctions to see “who can dish out the taxpayers’ money better than the next one?” Mr Hart added that voters in a democracy would not be likely to vote for reduced benefits. “Once people are on the public teat you can’t get them off.”

 

 

 

 

The result of all this democracy was that where sovereign debt was once set at risk free rates, government debt was now starting to look like the epicentre of risk. Mr Hart said the next big thing was going to be where to find a safe asset?

 

 

 

 

Mr Hart said that the current negotiations were only likely to “kick the can further down the road” but that Armageddon could be just around the corner: “Why is this Armageddon? It’s not just debt that the Greek government has borrowed from the Greek population – the German, French and Italian banks all own this debt,” said Mr Hart.

 

 

 

 

He said that US banks don’t own a lot of the European debt, but credit default swaps have been issued by the Americans. “They’re also at risk because of the potential fallout from a Greek default,” said Mr Hart, adding that this was not like a Pakistan default where the debt might be owed to the Pakistani people by their own government.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mr Hart also warned the problems were not just limited to Greece and Europe: “The US is following the same path with US Federal Reserve and Congress spending out of control – they are also heading for a day of reckoning”.

 

 

 

 

“It’s like a pleasure boat at the top of Vic Falls – you’re not too close but you don’t notice you’re drifting. Then down you go. It’s very sudden.”

 

 

 

 

Asked about the potential effect of these global financial woes on South Africa Mr Hart said it was a question of better yield.

 

 

 

 

“We know the US will have zero yield for a long time to come like Japan,” said Mr Hart, adding that he suspected investment would still come in unless China started to slow down and the commodities story reversed which would be a risk to the rand, along with higher inflation and interest rates that would detract from growth.

 

 

Political brinkmanship would also be a feature of South Africa until the ANC electoral conference: “If there is any indication in 2012 that there is going to be mine and bank nationalisation and land grabs we would be setting ourselves up for having a generation long recession.”

Article via Business Day – click here for original article


Moody’s warns on SA debt

‘Maybe Greece will be solvent if you put their retirement age at 85.’

ALEC HOGG: I write a column every week, Wayne. It’s distributed to about 20 000 people who subscribe to it onMoneyweb, and it’s also published in The Citizen and theWeekend Witness. And this week I’ve had a look at Greece and I think, if you are going anywhere around the world, that is the big story of the moment, isn’t it?

WAYNE McCURRIE: Well, ja, it is, and it’s not a new story. Quite frankly what’s been happening in the market has actually been around for a long time. This Greece story has been around for a very long time, and before that Ireland. Then the worry about Portugal and then the potential worry about Spain. So this is not new news. It just seems to have come to a head today with the resignation and the appointment of a new finance minister in Greece, and all of the riots that they are having there. They need more money and, quite frankly, they are going to get it.

ALEC HOGG: Well, the thrust of my column is they need to start working – working as in stopping having a bit of a holiday – and putting their heads down and taking the austerity package
Chris Hart is an economist at Investment Solutions and he joins us now. Chris, the whole story that’s going on in Greece and the possibility that it’ll have a domino effect – is there anything that we as South Africans need to be concerned about?

CHRIS HART: There is, because there’s no doubt this is what one calls a “sovereign Lehman” kind of effect. Effectively what’s happening in Europe is that the political will to bail countries like Greece out is waning rapidly. In other words there is a very serious negative political consequence that politicians are finding at the polls, particularly that the Germans are finding. Very unpopular to bail them out, and the austerity package is very unpopular. So within Greece you can lose your political career by backing austerity plans, and you can lose your political career in Germany by backing the bailout. …I think at this stage they’ll probably pony up the money to keep Greece going a little bit.
I think what’s happening in Europe is effectively similar to the Berlin Wall falling in ’89, etc. I think we are getting to the stage where the welfare state concept is about to keel over in bankruptcy. I think it’s simply not sustainable.

ALEC HOGG: Fascinating that, because even the Brits are now going to be called on to put in a billion euros. And certainly the headlines in England, from their tabloids, are: “Why the hell should we bail out the Greeks?” So they are expanding the net, not just from the euro monetary zone, but from everyone in the EU.

CHRIS HART: Everybody in the EU. You can imagine in Britain, where they’ve already gone into austerity, and there’s big cuts in various things, and there’s already been protests in Britain, just for them to come up with money I think would be extremely difficult from a political point of view.

ALEC HOGG: It’s good that we aren’t involved there, or part of the European Union.
But we did get a report today from Moody’s, which had a cautionary note in it. Chris, I don’t know if you had a chance to look at that.

CHRIS HART: I didn’t see the Moody’s report, unfortunately.

ALEC HOGG: It gave a stable outlook for the country. We’ve had an A3 grading from Moody’s. But what it does say is that it’s a little bit worried that the debt dynamics are not on a favourable trend. In other words, our debt is now starting to grow a little bit too rapidly.

CHRIS HART: I think they are right to flag that. But in my opinion there is one thing that is not well understood in terms of the debt dynamics. In Europe you have massive shortages in unfunded pension liabilities, which is not really even coming onto the table. That’s one of the reasons why you’ve got that bankruptcy. In South Africa our government pension fund scheme is fully funded, and that is unusual in international terms. And to my mind that already puts South Africa in a much, much better position than the US or Europe, which is facing ageing populations and these unfunded pension liabilities. The only way you can actually resolve that is to start jacking up the retirement age by quite a bit in Greece from 50 or whatever they are retiring at. Maybe Greece will be solvent if you put their retirement age at 85 or something like that. ALEC HOGG: [Chuckles] They don’t want to work, anyway. What are the chances of taking their retirement age from 50 to 85?

CHRIS HART: You know something, it’s when people are on the public [benefit], you cannot damn well get them off it. I know the Greeks in South Africa – they work damn hard, because they know there is no state support for them. But when you’ve got a situation that has built up in Europe, and Greece is particularly bad, the same in Italy and Spain, etc, where you’ve got these enormous benefits of entitlement that the state gives, and effectively a mismatch between what politicians have promised and what taxpayers can deliver, I think that mismatch is something that’s got to be righted, otherwise these countries are going to actually continue to fall back.

ALEC HOGG: Chris Hart is an economist at Investment Solutions

Transcript via Moneyweb.co.za – click here to view original content


How food follows crude

A sustained 10% increase in energy prices pushes the average long-term price of food up by 2%-3%, a World Bank study has found.

Agriculture is four times more energy intensive than manufacturing, so the price of food is highly dependent on the oil price, said World Bank senior economist Andrew Burns at the release of the Bank’s report “Global economic prospects” last week. The effect is stronger in developed countries, where more energy-intensive technology is used; developing countries tend to use less fuel and fertiliser.

Because of these feed-in effects, the Bank says most of the increase in the average price of food between 1986 and 2003 and again between 2004 and 2010 can be attributed to the oil price rise over the same periods.

If oil prices remain high — which is expected, says Burns — much of the growth in global food prices will be permanent. “This will be a major challenge for governments,” he says.

Supply shortfalls and higher demand are also major determinants of crop prices. If short-term supply-side factors improve (if there are better harvests in 2011/2012) and energy prices drop, global food prices will decline in the long run. But they will be higher than in the late 1990s, thanks to increased energy prices.

SA agriculture is also extremely vulnerable to global energy prices. The first reason is that the sector’s energy source (liquid fuels) is largely imported, whereas manufacturing uses domestically produced energy from coal, for example.

“That’s a particular [distortion] in SA,” says Investment Solutions economist Chris Hart. “Our agriculture is under threat from competition and inflation if liquid fuels drive up the energy input costs.” This is also why SA’s food inflation is so dependent on the rand.

Economies should be hoping the rise in the oil price is kept in check. Not only because a 10% lift in the oil price can lead to a 0,5% drop in GDP, but because of upward pressure on food prices .

Hart says a slowdown in the global economy should ease pressure from the demand side. Regarding the supply side, however, Opec could not come to a decision to boost output at its meeting last week, which means if supply remains curbed and demand rises, so will prices.

In the worst-case scenario of both higher energy and food costs, “policy should be targeted at those who will be affected the most — the poor — and general subsidies should be avoided,” says Burns.

Article via FM.co.za – click here to view original article


Zuma urges improved service delivery

Zuma tells delegates to jobs summit government needs to be at the centre of the growth drive in line with its vision of a developmental state.

SAM MKOKELI

POOR service delivery needed to be improved to place the government at the centre of SA’s economic development, President Jacob Zuma told a jobs summit in Pretoria yesterday.

The summit with labour federation leaders follows one held last month with business leaders, as the government tries to create consensus for its job-creation agenda. Its new growth path strategy has set a target of creating 5- million new jobs in a decade .

Mr Zuma’s emphasis on the state’s role in the economy was criticised yesterday in comment on his remarks by Chris Hart, chief strategist at Investment Solutions. He said it was crowding out private sector space to operate.

Mr Zuma told the labour summit that the government needed to be at the centre of the growth drive in line with its vision of a developmental state, which his administration was relying on to drive economic development in SA. He said the government’s plans were boosted by the turn of the economic tide since the 2009 recession. The economy expanded 4,4% in the last quarter of last year, compared to 2,7% in the third quarter.

The government’s focus in the coming years would be to stimulate SA’s productive capacity to boost job creation, Mr Zuma told the summit.

The developmental state would be built on the ethos of service delivery, of providing quality services to communities in urban and rural areas.

“It means teachers, nurses, policemen and women, municipal employees and all public servants must work diligently to provide services,” Mr Zuma said.

Mr Hart said he was worried because the government — which was failing in its core competence — was now venturing into the private sector.

“The activists who brought us freedom in 1994 deserve a lot of credit, but they are trying to drive jobs now, which is not their area of expertise,” he said.

The private sector was increasingly being cut out of the process of creating growth and jobs through legislation and policies that were hostile to business.

“Unfortunately, business and enterprise activity are the only sources of all wealth in a society. There are no exceptions,” said Mr Hart.

Congress of South African Trade Unions president Sdumo Dlamini said the summit was helpful in providing the opportunity for unions to influence government thinking.


Fuel price increases will push up food costs

South African motorists should expect a tough year ahead as yet another fuel price increase is expected when the transport levies that Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan announced in the budget kick in next month.

With an increase of 43c per litre, 95 unleaded in Gauteng will cost R9.42, while 93 unleaded and lead replacement petrol would now cost R9.25 a litre.

The price of diesel rose by 64c a litre.

This price increase is expected to be echoed on the first Wednesday in April, Econometrix economist Tony Twine said.

“We are currently anticipating upwards of another 40c per litre for the petrol price on April 6, which will include the 18c per litre tax and Roads Accident Fund levy increases,” he said.

Gordhan announced in his budget speech last week that the levies on petrol and diesel will go up by 10c per litre.

The Automobile Association of South Africa predicts South Africans should expect a “tough year” ahead. Spokesman Garry Ronald said the increase was linked to unrest in the middle East, coupled with a demand for fuel after concerns over shortages.

Chris Hart, an economist at Investment Solutions, said commuters will now spend more.

Hart said fuel was a “key input cost for farmers”, and higher fuel costs will lead to less production and higher food prices on supermarket shelves.

Article courtesy of Times Live – please click here for the original article

 

 


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.