Trade Unions: Friend or Foe
Increasingly SA's trade union movement behaves like the enemy of the people. They disdain the poor and the unemployed and have pushed up the wage bill to unacceptably high levels. To say this as the granddaughter of a famous trade unionist is almost sacrilege but the unions need to be taken to task.
They are holding the country back in many ways obstructing progress in the public service on every level, especially education. And if they cannot win an argument, they blackmail the country through strike action, some of which are unruly and lawless.
South Africans demand good education - the basis of any successful democracy - and will no longer stand idly by while the unions wreak havoc with our development agenda.
There is nothing more urgent than to reverse our high illiteracy and innumeracy rates; to improve our maths and science results to prepare South African youth for the labour market; and to demand teachers who are qualified, competent, dedicated and professional.
The recent budget proposals indicate how precarious the economy is: a low skills base, an inflexible labour regime, high current account deficits, high youth employment and a very low skills base.