Report unreliable: Employment Equity Commission and Minister differ on central facts, warns Solidarity: White males' representation in top levels dropped sharply in 10 years
Trade union Solidarity today described the latest report of the Department of Labour's Commission for Employment Equity and the Minister of Labour's statement on the report as unreliable (see here). This comes after the Minister announced today that only 16,9% of employees in the top levels and 35,9% of senior management employees are black.
These figures differ from those provided in the report, according to which black employees have 24% representation in top management positions and 33,6% representation in senior management positions.
Solidarity also called the reliability of the report's findings into question, as the progress of affirmative action is once again understated. Even though the representation of white males dropped by more than 16 percentage points at the top level and 19 percentage points at senior level over the past ten years, the pace of transformation is still criticised.
Top management also represents only 0,8% of all employees covered in the survey. In addition, the report uses the racial composition of the economically active population (EAP) as the only measure for evaluating patterns in the labour market.
According to Dr Dirk Hermann, Deputy General Secretary of Solidarity, the Employment Equity Act is clear on what measure has to be used. "The act says that compliance with employment equity legislation should be determined by considering the composition of the EAP and the pool of suitably trained persons, the impact of current and possible future economic and financial factors, as well as the number of current and expected vacant positions. Declaring that employment equity is still inadequately enforced based on the EAP alone is misleading," said Hermann. "The report's findings are therefore insufficient."