COSATU, THE COMMISSION FOR EMPLOYMENT EQUITY AND THE GREAT DIVIDE
In its response to the recent annual report of the Commission for Employment Equity (CEE), Cosatu claimed that the report demolished "the ludicrous assertion by former President FW de Klerk that ‘the main inequality divide in South Africa is no longer between blacks and whites, but between unionised and employed workers on the one hand, and unemployed on the other'".
Not at all.
In the first place the CEE Report itself is woefully inadequate and often inaccurate. Solidarity has published a critique of the report that should be studied by anyone who is interested in the question (see here).
The authors of the CEE report seem to be unaware that in any normal economy the actual and primary purpose of employing and promoting key personnel is to assure the effective and successful management of the undertaking. It should not be compliance with artificial racial criteria that have nothing to do with effective management.
The failure of the CEE and of Cosatu to grasp this point is revealed by their criticism of the Western Cape for failing to meeting to meet rigid racial targets. On the other hand, the CEE is full of praise for the Government elsewhere for being the best performing sector in terms of equity targets. However, they ignore woefully inadequate performance in several provinces and departments - which is due, to a large extent, to appointments based on race rather than merit.