The truth about the Commission for Employment Equity's report
The annual report of the Commission for Employment Equity (CEE) is riddled with misrepresentations, addition errors and questionable methodology, and is therefore irrelevant and irresponsible, the trade union Solidarity said today. This comes after the announcement by chairperson of the commission, Mpho Nkeli, last week that "white men still monopolise top management positions". Apart from the report's questionable scientific merit, the CEE's own statistics show that black South African are rapidly taking control of jobs in South Africa.
Despite the impression created by the CEE, their report shows a constant decrease in the number of white men in the workplace. According to the CEE's report, white representation at top management levels tumbled from 78% in 2001 to 54,5% in 2009. Representation of white men at senior management level has dropped from 69,5% to 46,3% since 2001.
At the professional and middle-management level, the representation of white men has dropped from 52,8% to 27,4% since 2001, and at the technically skilled, academically qualified and junior management levels the decrease since 2001 has been from 21,9% to 15%. At the semi-skilled job levels, white men's representation decreased from 5,9% in 2001 to 3,0% in 2009 and at the unskilled levels from 1,1% to 0,8%.
From these statistics it is clear that white men's position has deteriorated dramatically in the past ten years.
In one of the CEE's misrepresentations, it is said that the representation of white men at senior management level showed a decrease of more than 10%, while the drop from 2001 to 2009 was in fact 22%.