The Congress of South African Trade Unions is seriously concerned at the sharp rise in unemployment shown in the figures for the first quarter of 2009 released on 5 May (see here).
A total of 208,000 jobs were lost, almost two thirds (143 000) of them in retail, just under a third (62,000) in manufacturing and the rest (53,000) in agriculture, transport and the public service. This has increased the number of officially unemployed people in the country from 3, 9 million to just under 4, 2 million.
The current figures are a complete reversal of the figures in the labour market indicators for the fourth quarter of 2008 which showed that the economy had created 189,000 new jobs. COSATU contested these figures at the time, because we were already hearing of major job losses in almost all sectors of the economy, in the wake of the world economic crisis.
The latest data have confirmed what we suspected then - that our economy has been shedding jobs at a rapid pace. But the latest stats are still not without more controversial surprises. Firstly, they indicate that 12,000 jobs were created in the mining sector since January. Yet mining has experienced declining growth, retrenchments have been reported and a number of companies have already shut down.
Secondly, the data suggest that outside of agriculture, most job losses have occurred in the informal sector, where some 96,000 jobs were lost compared to 88,000 in the formal sector.
One of the biggest hurdles facing Stats SA is to define clearly what constitutes the informal sector. It is generally taken to be that part of our economy that is unregulated, usually small businesses run from homes, street pavements or taxi ranks. Often those who lose jobs in the mines, factories and supermarkets end up in the informal sector where they set up small survivalist enterprises. It is alarming that even this sector, which has traditionally offered a minimal degree of livelihood for retrenched workers and those who cannot find employment in the formal sector, is now said to be shedding jobs as well.