Wiseman Khuzwayo knows nothing about "wriggle room". He made that up. Azar
Jammine is blowing smoke. He knows nothing about the ANC. Hugo Pienaar? Who
is he?
This article is pure propaganda. These are voluntary class enemies.
  _____  


 

Business Report.jpg

 

 

Public sector pay demand poses threat

 

 

Wiseman Khuzwayo, Business Report, Johannesburg, 5 October 2014 

 

South Africa, recently emerged from a bruising five-month-long platinum
industry strike, is heading for what could possibly be an even bigger
showdown on the labour front after public sector unions tabled a demand for
a 15 percent wage hike last week.

 

This plea, from 16 unions who are representing around 1.3 million state
employees, would be impossible for the government to agree to without
jeopardising the country's finances, and risking the ire of the credit
rating agencies.

 

It comes at a time when there is clamour for Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene
to present a credible plan to plug the budget deficit and the current
account deficit when he presents his first Medium Term Budget Policy
Statement on October 22.

 

If history is any guide, the wage talks will be awash with tension and
acrimony right at the onset as the government has very little wriggle room
to accede to the double-digit increase when the Reserve Bank forecasts
inflation this year to average 6.2 percent.

 

The last strike by the public sector unions, which shut schools and caused
chaos in hospitals, and was accompanied by widespread intimidation,
continued for three weeks through most of August 2010.

 

It cost the economy an estimated R1 billion a day. When it was settled,
state spending went up by 1 percent.

 

Economists said the demand was wide of the mark and even if the unions did
come down, as they usually did, and a settlement was reached it would be at
a huge expense to the economy.

 

Hugo Pienaar, senior economist at the Bureau for Economic Research at the
University of Stellenbosch, said: "The 15 percent wage demand is simply way
out. It is detrimental to the budget and the rating agencies would downgrade
us further. Long-term interest rates would go up."

 

He said the GDP expectation had already been scaled down to 1.7 percent in
2014, so government revenue would be less than budgeted.

 

Pienaar said the current wage settlement, which expired at the end of March,
was consumer price index plus 1 percent. On that basis, he expected the
final settlement in this round would be 5 percent to 6 percent as inflation
would average just above 6 percent in 2014.

 

Azar Jammine, chief economist at Econometrix, said the 15 percent demand was
way in excess of projected inflation, raising the possibility of public
sector workers embarking upon a substantial nationwide strike in the first
half of 2015.

 

He said: "Emboldened by the aggression of industrial action recorded in the
first seven months of this year, the threat of an even bigger strike among
public sector workers must stand as the principal danger to the economy
achieving growth of between 2.5 percent and 3 percent, the range of most
expectations, next year."

 

Jammine said the government had very little room to manoeuvre, given its
commitment to reducing the budget deficit progressively over the next three
years.

 

"Giving in to ambitious wage demands would most certainly result in a rising
than falling trend in budget deficits, with the associated likelihood the
ratings agencies would then revise downwards the credit rating on the South
African government bonds.

 

"In turn, this would increase long-term interest rates, forcing government
to cut back on more vital social expenditure."

 

He said the most obvious way in which the government could make way for
bigger wage increases than those budgeted for would be to reduce the size of
the public service.

 

However, in recent years, it had been precisely the increase in employment
in the public service which had provided whatever employment growth has
occurred in the economy.

 

"Private sector employment has remained fairly static. Therefore, in the
short term, to reverse the rising trend of public sector employment would
aggravate the trend of overall employment and could also exert downward
pressure on economic growth."

 

Jammine said the more favoured alternatives would be to increase the
productivity of those employed in the public service. Positive real wage
increases could then be justified, without generating higher inflation or
reducing overall economic growth.

 

"The risk here is that the ruling ANC party would stand to lose votes in
forthcoming elections. Better still, however, would be if government were
able to make inroads into excessive wastage within government spending."

 

 

From:
http://www.iol.co.za/business/news/public-sector-pay-demand-poses-threat-1.1
760186#.VDFbFPmSyD8

 

 

 

 

 

 

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