Youth and work
in South Africa:
Issues, experiences and ideas from a young democracy
Round Table on The integration of
youth into working life,
Second International Vocational and Technical Education Congress, Seoul,
Korea April 26 to 30 1999.
Adrienne Bird
Department of Labour, South Africa
This paper provides an overview of South Africa´s labour
market and the position of young people within it. It gives a description
of the education and training system and the ways it is being moulded
to support economic and employment growth, and social development in
South Africa. Finally it offers a reflection on policy implementation
challenges that lie ahead and some of the ideas that are under discussion
in relation with this matter.
South Africa faces one of the worst massive unemployment
crisis in the world. In 1997, 22,9% of the 13, 785, 493 economically
active South Africans were unemployed. 35% of the unemployed are below
25 years old and 72% are below 35. The level of unemployment is much
worse for the African population for example, 61% of young Africans
between the ages of 16 and 25 are unemployed. Across all groups, unemployment
for women in the same age cohort is 54% and for rural people, 56%.
Poor economic growth is at the heart of this problem.
Economic growth has not risen much above 3% in the mid-90s and is hovering
just above 0 percent at present. South Africa has experienced a massive
decline in agricultural (3.9%) and mining (2.8%) sector employment and
an increase in financial (6.1%) and other services (3.8%). These shifts
have taken place in a context where absolute employment levels have
increased by a meagre 13.8% in 25 years. Another dimension of the crisis
is poor labour absorption. South African formal economy had an average
annual of 44.5% labour absorption and an annual incremental of 0.4%
in the 1990-95 period. This poor labour absorption is characterized
by a lower demand for workers at the bottom-end of the occupational
ladder and an increase in the demand for more skilled workers in the
formal economy. The group that has benefited the least from these shifts
in labour demand has been African workers who, because of past discrimination
in education and labour market policies are concentrated in elementary
occupations.
Wages have risen for those in employment in line with
productivity improvements. But the ILO Country Study states that South
Africa´s income inequality is one of the highest in the world. African,
female-headed households represent the poorest group in the country,
followed by African, male headed households. At the opposite end, white,
male headed households are the most affluent.
Unlikely other developing countries, South Africa has
fewer people active in the informal sector than unemployed people, largely
due to apartheid policies which suppressed entrepreneurial activity
of the African majority for nearly fifty years. The ILO study reported
that for African men, white men and white women the rate of self-employment
is approximately 10%, and for African women is 18,4%. The majority of
some 2.664,554 "survivalist" and "informal" activities
occur in agriculture (29%), construction (4%), trade, catering and accommodation
(17%) and community and social services (34,7%). Of all informal sector
activity only 23% of black people worked in production or trading activities.
The informal sector is characterized by unregulated flexibility, sub-contracting,
and incomes that are substantially lower than those earned in the formal
sector. In the Labour Market Flexibility Survey conducted in 1995 and
1996 it was found that some 85.5% of firms reported that they had made
use of temporary/casual workers and 43.5% had used contract labour.
The ILO Country Review conducted in tandem to the Presidential
Labour Market Commission in 1996, found out that the most likely age
group among employers was 26-35, considerably older than was typical
in other countries. Many believe that the reason is linked to poor schooling
and social problems linked to disrupted family life under apartheid
and in the struggle to effect its overthrow. Youth between 16-25 years
are 35.16% of the unemployed population and young people between 26-35
are 37.10%, decreasing when the age group is older. Unemployed youth,
especially in communities where unemployment is high, have few positive
role models. An increasing number live in homes where their parent/s
or guardians have never worked. Self-employment is not generally perceived
to be a viable alternative, and there are still too few succesful entrepreneurial
role models in African communities. Apartheid prevented acces of African
entrepreneurs to the market and small business people who were successful
became identified as "collaborators with apartheid". In this
context, sexual and substance abuse are widespread and the incidence
of crime constitutes a national crisis. The HIV/AIDS virus has reached
epidemic proportions. The national infection rate, as measured by the
number of women testing positive in anti-natal clinics has risen from
10,4% in 1995, to 22,8% in 1998. Within this figure, the highest infection
rate has been measured among those between 15 and 24 years old where
the rate is about 1 in 4.
Educational level contributes to employment and income
inequality. A statistic made in 1998 showed that unemployment was highest
(25%) for those with an intermediate amount of education, and lower
for those with none (19%) or with 12 years schooling or more (18%).
The level falls dramatically at higher levels of education. The probability
of an African with 14 years education being unemployed is around 1%
as compared to about 30% for those with 10 years education. At the same
time, the wage differentials accruing per year of eduaction for those
with 14 years of education compared with those with no education are
17.1, 15.7 and 18.8 percent for Africans, Whites and other groups respectively
high returns by international standards.
The denial to have a good quality general education
that black South Africans had to endure during the apartheid period
was one of the first areas of intervention of the new democratic government.
One measure of the change was to change the age profile of school leavers.
In 1995 the figure of those under 18 years that were leaving school
had risen to 43% and consequentially those over 19 years old were 56%.
But the poor prospects of finding work after school also contributes
young people remain at school in an attempt to attain the tertiary
level entry qualification as a hedge against unemployment. There has
been an 80% decline in the number of apprenticeships from the mid-70s,
with an absolute level of about 5000 new contracts signed in 1995. There
is an intermediate college sector which provides occupationally oriented
courses to students, but these students are often less likely to be
employed than people with work experience.
The social partners that got together in the country´s
first Job Summit in October 1998 agreed to the introduction of a Youth
Brigade Scheme that is to give special access to young people to the
job creation schemes of government, and to incorporate "life"
as well as "vocational" skills. Young people also sought special
access to new jobs created in the construction of new infrastructure
in integrated provincial projects. The employers announced a new Business
Trust to be funded by a voluntary turn-over contribution by their members.
The Trust is to focus on the promotion of the South African tourism
industry and includes a major education (primary education literacy
and numeracy upgrading) and training component. Besides, the trade unions
announced a new job creation fund to be resourced by a voluntary contribution
of one day´s pay by all their membership. However, the great challenge
is to find agreement on underlying macro-economic, industry and labour
market policies. Particularly urgent for young people will be agreement
on issues such as youth wages, probation periods and organised work
experience within the collective bargaining realm.
The initiatives made by the new South African government
to solve the effects of education on future labour opportunities are
a number of important interventions in the education and training arena.
*To address the problem of the quality of learning
opportunities across the country, the Ministers of Education and Labour
joined in 1995, forced to introduce a National Qualification Framework
(NQF). The Act that was produced provides for an outcomes-based system
where there is an explicit focus on what has been learnt, as measured
against socially agreed standards. The NQF provides for the registration
of different levels of education and is made up of eight agreed national
levels and a range of learning progression routes. Agreement on standards
to be registered is recommended by twelve National Standards Bodies
made up of employers, trade unionists, government officials, professional
bodies and education and training providers. Once standards and qualifications
are registered, the quality assurance of the standards is ensured by
a second set of established and new institutions. They register assessors
and keep a record of learner achievements. They also formally accredit
providers as competent to train. Quality assurance bodies will be established
in the different educative sectors. The model was proposed to enable
both young and older learners to have their current learning recognised
through a process of Recognition of Prior Learning, and then have the
opportunity to progress further in learning, be it in full-time or part-time
contexts.
*Among the wide range of initiatives taken by the government
to improve access to schooling and the quality of that schooling it
must be noted that a Schools Act has been passed by the Minister of
Education, which aims to effect a holistic transformation of schools.
It introduced more autonomous school governing councils, a culture of
learning and teaching, improvements in the quality of all educational
inputs including curriculum, teacher upgrading and improved teacher-pupil
ratios in the country. The most radical transformation effected by the
government is the elimination of all racial restrictions on access.
Schooling is now compulsory for all children for ten years, including
a preparatory year.
*The Ministers of Education and Labour have launched
complementary initiatives to improve the range of learning opportunities
available to learners in the post-compulsory learning phase and to enhance
the responsiveness of the learning to the labour market. The Minister
of Education has passed the Further Education and Training Act as well
as the Higher Education Act. Both Acts envisage that learning institutions
should prepare three-year rolling plans, composed of a new focus on
learning programmes. State funds will increasingly be weighted towards
those programmes which are perceived as vital to underpin reconstruction
and development of the society mathematics, science and technology
and the like. Both Acts introduce advisory bodies to the Minister of
Education regarding policy and allocation of resources.
The Minister of Labour has introduced two pieces of
legislation: the Skills Development Act and the Skills Development Levies
Act. These seek to improve the quantity and quality of learning for
those already in work (be it self-employment or formal sector activity)
and those seeking to enter the labour market. The Skills Development
Act establishes the National Skills Authority NSQ- that will advise
the Minister on a national skills development strategy and means for
its implementation. A central vehicle for implementation will be thirty-odd
Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETAs) employer- trade
union- government bodies- to be established across the economy, e.g
Transport, Tourism, Banking, Construction and the like. SETAs will be
required to prepare Skills Plans on an annual basis and these
plans will have to identify skill targets and priorities for productivity
and employment growth, providing by this an opportunity to diffuse the
work of research agencies into industry. SETAs will also be responsible
for the development and implementation of learnerships to promote "apprenticeship-like"
qualifications, but at any level of the National Qualification Framework
and in any field of occupational learning and serving both large, small
and emerging firms. It is intended that they will identify areas of
employment opportunity or constraint in the formal or informal
segments of industry- and then design learnerships to meet the need.
Already 217 learners have completed the first four pilot learnerships
in construction and tourism. Responsive institutions will provide the
structured learning and SETAs will assist in finding placements for
learners. This program will need to link with initiatives launched by
the National Youth Commission.
The Skills Development Levies Act acts to put in place
"user-charge" type incentives and thereby to complement the
Skills Development Act. It introduces a 1% private-sector payroll levy
that all firms will pay, but at the same time they will be able to claim
grants for training done from their SETA. The public sector is also
included in all of these initiatives, however they will not pay a levy,
instead they will have to budget 1% of personnel costs. The South African
formal apprenticeship system has failed to rise to the challenge of
providing a bridge for young people to enter the labour market. The
newly proposed "learnership" system is an attempt to remedy
this problem. It provides for structured learning and work experience
and culminates in an occupational qualification. Recent experience suggests
that this framework is promising, but extensive support is still needed
to bridge from the learnership to placement and self-employment. We
are hopeful that our levy-grant scheme will help to provide the financial
incentives firms require and encourage them to both provide opportunities
for work experience and then facilitate post training placement. We
have found that there is, at present, a problem on the side of training
providers, and look forward to the programmes of the Department of Education
kicking in to enhance the capacity of providers to support learnerships
in a more flexible way.
Another initiative of various government departments
has been to launch job creation schemes. For young people the key concern
has been securing access to these schemes and ensuring that some learning
takes place within these programmes including life skills. The
Department of Labour´s Employment Services local offices are increasingly
positioning themselves to act as a selection and referral agency for
these schemes. In general, programmes such as Youth Brigades or Youth
Service schemes are more geared towards re-integrating young people
back into productive society, and are less focused on the delivery of
hard skills. By contrast, learnerships are strongly focused on occupational
skills and aim to gain a reputation for high quality training.
A young person will have a number of increasingly clear
options when contemplating entry into the labour market once our policies
are fully implemented:
- Improved information and guidance about the labour market when making
career choices both from the learning institution as well as
the employment services local office. SETAs will play an important
part in preparing up to date information on trends.
- Placement in a formal sector job, if one is available and the young
person is qualified.
- Return to full-time learning with a view to acquiring occupational
skills that appear to be needed.
- Entry to a learnership with structured learning and work experience
in an occupational area- with work experience facilitated by a SETA
or college.
- Placement on a job creation scheme if the young person needs to
be "oriented to the labour market". Youth brigades and Youth
Service Schemes are envisaged.
- Preparation to commence their own business either alone or
in partnership with others with support available from various agencies.
- Work experience, linked to probation periods and life skills could
fill the gap between youth brigades and learnerships.
- Young people already in work, either in the formal sector or in
self-employment should be able to access upgrading opportunities.
Employment equity legislation should assist those who have previously
suffered from discrimination.
- Support for those with substance abuse problems, victims from sexual
abuse or violence and psychological problems will require special
support.