Issue 14, Vol 10: 27 June 2013

In this issue:

Youth Employment Accord offers Mass-Based and Holistic Approach to Employment 
Creation
Youth Employment Accord offers Mass-Based and Holistic Approach to Employment 
Creation

By Yershen Pillay

The nature and extent of youth unemployment in the country requires more than 
loud rhetoric or a simple policy response. Right now approximately 25% of South 
Africans are unemployed and of those who are classified as being unemployed 
around 72% are young people between 15 and 35 years of age. That's millions of 
young South Africans who simply cannot be absorbed into the open labour market. 
To place the burden squarely on the shoulders of the state is to underestimate 
the nature and character of the crisis itself. The structural problems in the 
local and global economy compounded by the challenges of education and skills 
development create the need for both demand and supply side interventions. 
These interventions can only be developed and implemented if all social 
partners commit to working together in creating jobs for youth. Recognizing 
that the state is an important actor but not the only actor is a necessary step 
to tackling the youth unemployment crisis. The Youth Employment Accord signed 
on the 18th of April 2013 by government, organized labour, organized business 
as well as community and youth formations offers a mass-based, collective and 
realistic approach to job creation for young South Africans. It recognizes the 
role and responsibilities of all social partners in addressing the youth 
unemployment crisis.

The Accord presents the best and most viable blueprint for job creation in the 
short term. The Youth Employment Strategy 2055 currently being developed by the 
National Youth Development Agency (NYDA) will attempt to offer a more long term 
plan with the aim of halving youth unemployment by 2055. The Accord should in 
the meantime assist with coordinating efforts at job creation for young people 
with the aim of making a meaningful contribution towards the creation of five 
million jobs by 2020. It contains a set of six commitments that all social 
partners have subscribed to. This alone offers more hope than a single policy 
response in the form of a youth wage subsidy or any other variant. It does so 
because of the recognition that no single actor or policy response will be able 
to make a dent on this bleak picture of youth unemployment in the country let 
alone eradicate it. More importantly is the diverse set of commitments 
contained in the Accord and the collective impact if implemented correctly. 
This collective impact may be able to do more for efforts at job creation than 
a youth wage subsidy. Simply put, you can incentivize employers with whatever 
tickles their fancy but the reality of the matter is that none will offer 
employment to a young person who is not qualified or lacks experience.

Education and skills development matters for job creation. However it is not 
the only area of development that matters. Hence the Youth Employment Accord 
speaks to five other areas of work exposure, private sector measures, public 
sector measures, youth target set-asides as well as youth entrepreneurship and 
youth cooperatives. Taken together, progress in these areas may lead to young 
South Africans being more employable while more jobs are created through public 
and private sector measures. Improving the levels of education and the quality 
of education can increase chances of employment for young people.

This is what commitment one of the Youth Employment Accord speaks to. 
Interventions aimed at second chance opportunities for matriculants, career 
guidance for urban and rural youth, expanding the intake of Further Education 
and Training Authorities or FETs and Sector Education and Training Authorities 
or SETAs may go along way in making young people more employable. Combine this 
commitment to education and training with the second commitment to enhanced 
work exposure through focused internships, vacation programmes, job shadowing 
etc. and we are well on our way to addressing the demand side of employment 
creation for young South Africans.

There however remains an important role for the public and private sector to 
absorb more young people into employment opportunities. The call for the 
Expanded Public Works Programme and the Community Works Programme to absorb 80% 
of new entrants from the ranks of young people is another important measure for 
speeding up efforts at job creation for youth.

The equal responsibility now placed on the private sector by the Accord should 
be able to yield the desired results for expanding the intake of young people 
into employment opportunities. This means that while we are preparing young 
South Africans for employment we are also placing youth into employment which 
remains one of our biggest challenges to date.

The fifth commitment is particularly important for transforming the current 
structure of our economy. This is where instruments such as the youth wage 
subsidy fall short. The aim is not only to produce more youth workers but more 
young entrepreneurs and particularly young black entrepreneurs.

The development of young black entrepreneurs and youth cooperatives will 
greatly assist to change the ownership and control patterns of our economy in 
the long run. Many countries have used the cooperatives mode of enterprise as a 
means of changing the ownership patterns of their economies or particular 
sectors of their economy. Stimulating the growth of youth cooperatives may in 
fact provide a viable means of enterprise for poverty alleviation and job 
creation for many young South Africans.

Ultimately the Accord can do more for job creation then any silver bullet 
response. Then aim now is to ensure its implementation and effective monitoring 
as we work towards a more long term plan for future generations.

Yershen Pillay is the YCLSA National Chairperson


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