AA Needs A Massive Training Boost

29th October 2020

AA Needs A Massive Training Boost

Many years after promulgation of the Employment Equity Act (EEA) it is time that its efficacy is reviewed.

As a labour relations consultant I constantly receive the following complaints:

The Star newspaper published a statement by Tito Mboweni the current Minister of Finance in which he made a similar complaint (Star 7 October 2006 page 2). Tito Mboweni was the Minister of Labour at the time that affirmative action (AA) was legislated under the EEA. He is reported to have said: “I have sought to recruit many competent black people, and no sooner have we trained them that they leave. I get so upset…… I am stopping this recruitment of black people. I am OK with my Afrikaners. They stay and do the work, and become experts”

In my view Tito Mboweni and many other SA employers are not simply victims of affirmative action. Rather, they are victims of Affirmative Auction. The scarcity of skills amongst black people was caused by the old apartheid government that purposely suppressed the right of black people to develop skills.

The solution to this problem needs to be to give the broad community of black people the necessary skills before legislating that they must be appointed into key positions. Failure to do this, on the one hand, creates an urgent and gigantic need to place black people in key posts, but on the other hand, creates a massive shortage of needed skills relative to the demand. It also results in Affirmative Auction, the monster attacking Tito Mboweni, where the few black people with skills are ‘auctioned’ to the highest bidder and therefore hop from job to job each time the bid is raised.

Thus the Skills Development Act should have been implemented and allowed to complete its task before the EEA was promulgated so as to grow the skills pool first and avoid a skills shortage. Also, the skills development system itself requires a review. It should be made much very much easier for employers to reclaim skills development grants and for training organisations to become accredited. Also, the outcomes based education system should be simplified and the unit standards system on which the accreditation of training courses relies should be scrapped. The system is far too sophisticated and bureaucratic, rendering it cumbersome and slow.

In this way the needed skills will be created quickly and will thus be able to keep up with the demand for AA candidates.

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Written by Ivan Israelstam, Chief Executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. He may be contacted on (011) 888-7944 or 0828522973 or on e-mail address: ivan@labourlawadvice.co.za. Web Address: www.labourlawadvice.co.za.