SEIFSA COMMENT ON PROPOSED LABOUR LAW AMENDMENTS
The Steel and Engineering Industries' Federation of South Africa (SEIFSA) acknowledges yesterday's announcement that Cabinet has decided not to ban labour broking in South Africa.
However, SEIFSA remains seriously concerned that many of the amendments contained in the Basic Conditions of Employment and Labour Relations Amendment Bills, including those further regulating labour broking, are punitive and place unnecessary additional restrictions on legitimate business operations, will raise the cost of doing business in South Africa and will result in further job losses in the country.
SEIFSA shares the disappointment expressed by Business Unity SA (BUSA) that Cabinet has decided to approve the Bills without conducting a further Regulatory Impact Assessment (RIA) on the impact of these Bills on business, employment and job creation. SEIFSA continues to believe that the Bills, once implemented, will have a negative impact on business, will reduce the number of existing jobs and will hamper the creation of new employment opportunities in the industry.
In particular, SEIFSA fully supports the BUSA assessment that the Bills will:
- Make employment more difficult, more complex, and will increase uncertainty and risk pertaining to employment.
- They will raise the cost and the complexity of doing business in South Africa.
- The amendments related to strikes and lock outs will not achieve their intended purpose. It is unclear how these will limit or address the substantial strike violence experienced in the metal industry during the course of last year.
"Employers are expected to create jobs, retain jobs, train more and offer opportunities for a better life for the people of our country. At the same time the draft legislation forces us to employ people on a permanent basis with very little employment flexibility required to capitalise on business opportunities under the prevailing economic climate. Employment is not created through making it more and more difficult to be in business" says Henk Duys, the President of SEIFSA.