YOUTH AND
UNEMPLOYMENT
By Dr Gavin Lewis, published as an oped in the Star, 31/1/13
By Dr Gavin Lewis, published as an oped in the Star, 31/1/13
We know that work experience is the silver bullet for youth
unemployment. So the question becomes
how to get South Africa’s unemployed youth into some form of formal employment
where they can get work experience. And since government can’t create jobs, it
has to be employment in the private sector.
Study after study by institutions such as the Small Business
Development Project (SBD) and the Centre for Development Enterprise (CDE) shows
that what employers are looking for in potential employees is some work
experience or the basic skills sets needed for a specific job. Skills and
training they can get quickly and efficiently in a tailored manner on the job –
as needed for that job and not as dreamt up by the bureaucrats in the
overfatted Sector Education and Training Authority (SETAs) which collect billions
in skills development levies.
Indeed there is growing evidence that generic training
schemes, such as entrepreneurship or workplace skills for unemployed youth, is just
money down the drain. When technical skills are imparted without the
opportunity for practical application in the workplace, they are all too often
quickly forgotten and never used. All that the training schemes do is to park
the unemployed youth for a while, without addressing the underlying causes of
unemployment.
Training systems fail, Martin Godfrey of the World Bank
says, “because young workers do not know which skills to acquire.” The
international experience is that the most successful training is provided by
the private sector where training and skills acquisition can be done most
quickly and efficiently on the job. This ensures that employers can get exactly
the skills sets they want, rather than what government officials think they
want.
An example of this is Germany’s vocational training scheme, which
combines attendance at the training school with a period of employment at lower
than normal wage rates with suitable and interested businesses.
In South African schools, vocational
education is not a high priority and has been relegated to the dysfunctional
Further Education and Training (FET) sector. The result is that our education
system is not supplying workers who have the basic skills sets that employers
need for specific jobs. Partnerships with local businesses, including on-the-job
training and linking school leavers to apprenticeships were rashly thrown out
with the bathwater with the introduction of the SETAs.
So while international best practice shows that a well
structured apprenticeship system based on trust and partnerships between
business, labour and government is a proven solution to youth unemployment, instead
we are burdened with crippling state intervention that focuses entirely on the supply
sides of things. The result is that poorly motivated students at FET colleges or
the ubiquitous SETAs are trained in out-of-date workshops far from the real
economy, and subsequently fail to attract job offers from employers.
Not surprisingly, South African employers prefer to invest
in workers with prior work experience. A major reason for this is that our labour
regulations add considerable risk to employing new staff members. To subsequently find out that the new hire is
unsuitable and therefore must be fired, is a costly and laborious exercise. The
bureaucracy of the Commission for Conciliation and Arbitration (CCMA) or the
Labour Court consumes hours of company time and expense. Even the costs of
normal retrenchment are very high in South Africa. Thus the stark reality is
that employers must employ an unknown quantity at their own peril. In fact, the
safest bet for employers is not to employ anyone at all, or to do so on a
strictly limited temporary contract basis.
A further reason is the high cost of employing inexperienced
young people, especially where they need on-the-job training. Yet within the
ANC Alliance, organised labour has the power to effectively veto all new
measures that would allow youth to be introduced to the workplace at a discounted
wage rate.
Hence government’s rejection of the Youth Wage Subsidy
proposals which would subsidise for a limited period the wages of youth starting off their careers, despite
Treasury’s endorsement in principle of the programme in 2007. This proposal, endorsed
by the Democratic Alliance and tried with success elsewhere in the world (see
the UK’s New Deal for Youth Employment, Canada’s Employment Tax Credit
Programme) now languishes on the shelf until there is a change of government at
national level.
The system is working well in the DA-controlled Western
Cape, in the form of its Works and Skills Programme for youth aged between 18
and 35 years of age. But constraints on provincial tax raising powers mean that
money is limited without national government buy-in.
Even the ban on labour broking which Cosatu so avidly seeks
will hit the youth hard, because the evidence shows that temporary work greatly
increases the chance of permanent jobs for the youth, who use the former as a
stepping stone to the latter.
For all these reasons, Government’s refusal to relax its
labour laws is breathtakingly short-sighted, especially set against
international evidence that in all economies a youthful workforce can
accelerate globally competitive manufacturing (e.g. electronics) and services,
in particular innovative value-added products, from advertising to apps for
cell phones.
So what is to be done?
One solution is to limit the reach of bargaining councils
for whole sectors. This would entail individual firms negotiating their own
terms with their own workers, as is the case in Chile. This avoids the
Harrismith-type situation where workers and employers sought to band together
to fight bargaining council agreements that priced them out of a job.
This is particularly relevant for start ups and small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), especially those employing between 10 and 100
people – the so called “missing middle” in firm sizes that create the most
jobs.
Indeed, removing obstacles overall to start ups and emerging
SMEs, the prime job generators in any economy, is also important – especially
addressing unnecessary and costly over-regulation mismanaged by a state that
lacks capacity.
In fact, the best thing government can do for unemployment
is to create an enabling environment for business to flourish, and to build
effective and affordable infrastructure, on the basis of mutual trust and close
cooperation with the private sector, mindful all the time of the shortcomings
of state capacity.
Other possibilities are opportunity vouchers for school
leavers to be used to subsidise a small business or to study further, the
introduction of entrepreneurial studies in the school curriculum, and greater
access to and better information from streamlined government enterprise support
schemes at provincial and national levels.
Better job search
systems would also help address the problems of inadequate job matching, poor
signalling from employers that want to hire staff, and weak labour market
information systems.
Programmes that address job creation via tax incentives for
businesses, labour law exemptions for special economic zones (SEZs) or job
zones in deprived areas, public works programmes that are well run, of longer
duration than the current average, corruption free and that produce
identifiable skills, and removing the obstacles to growth, all have their role
to play.
But is government ready and able to play its part in a
united front against unemployment? It remains to be seen whether our new deputy
president will be able to inject such business-minded thinking into the
country’s leadership.
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