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Conscription could fight unemployment

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Robust and decisive plans are required to mitigate the risk posed by the lack of skills and jobs among the youth of this country. On Thursday President Jacob Zuma will open Parliament and deliver his fourth State of the Nation address since he took the helm in 2009.

The address is generally a platform through which the head of state takes stock of the government’s performance, announces commitments and priorities for the year ahead while articulating the strategic imperatives that should guide government spending.

Over the past three years, Zuma’s emphasis has correctly centred on five key priorities, namely job creation, education, health, safety and rural development. This meant that all government programmes and expenditure had to be aligned with these priorities.

While some will be looking forward to this week’s speech with great anticipation, it is also possible that the address will not contain anything extraordinary.

 

Since taking over as president, Zuma has reshuffled his cabinet twice and suspended the chief of police. It is assumed that these drastic measures were meant to demonstrate the president’s decisiveness on issues of service delivery. While it is possible that the State of the Nation address will sets the tone for Zuma’s political strategy to retain a second term as the ANC president, it is arguable whether the government has in fact achieved its targets in these priority areas.

Although major institutional announcements such as the creation of the jobs fund, the youth subsidy scheme for companies and the New Growth Path became a prominent feature of the past three years, one doubts if they have translated into meaningful interventions that have alleviated the plight of the unemployed and the youth. This needs to change.

Characterised by a widening gap between the rich and poor, increasing levels of corruption, violent crime and the increasing rate of unemployment, South Africa has not recorded any significant percentage of economic growth in the past three years and as such cannot create any decent jobs and employment opportunities for the semi-skilled people of our country.

Early this year, the numbers of young people who joined the unemployed ranks and are not connected to any tertiary or further education institutions increased to more than 3.2 million. These are telling signs of a ticking time bomb. It is this sector that has the legitimate and reasonable expectation for decisive announcements from the president’s address.

Because the youth is the future and Zuma is on record as emphasising the importance of education and the extent to which young people are unemployed, the president owes it to young people to make extraordinary announcements at the opening of Parliament.

 

On Thursday, the country should be less worried about the excuses as to why jobs were not created, and more concerned with the extent to which measures and a policy framework have been put in place to create an enabling environment for jobs and economic participation of black people, who are in the majority.

In Polokwane a year ago, Zuma mentioned that “the creation of decent jobs must be the central focus of all economic policies of the government”. The president stressed that “the comprehensive drive to enhance social equity and competitiveness, systemic changes to mobilise domestic investment around activities that can create sustainable employment and strong social dialogue to focus all stakeholders on encouraging growth in employment-creating activities” must be the emphasis.

Although the monitoring and planning capacity has been created in the president’s office, very few programmes have come out of government departments and institutions directed towards this.

The desperate situation facing unemployed youth is out of control. The gravity of this dire situation manifests itself in growing levels of anger and violent conduct by young people who find themselves resorting to crime as a means of survival. Others are compelled to turn to tenderpreneurship to survive. This has even prompted the ANC Youth League in Gauteng to campaign for the scrapping of tenders as a means of mitigating this.

As he faces the nation, Zuma must shy away from the procrastination that has so far characterised his term of office. He needs to announce robust and radical interventions that are drastically needed to address the plight of young people in the townships and rural areas. He owes it to the nation.

Last year Defence Minister Lindiwe Sisulu correctly intimated measures to mitigate this by absorbing these youth into army barracks and training camps.

The president needs to make use of the opportunity to announce, among other things, the following drastic measures:

n Introducing a basic, across-the-board military “conscription” programme for all young people between the ages of 16 and 25 who are neither connected with any school, tertiary or further education institution nor gainfully employed.

This type of compulsory militarisation of the youth will be nothing like apartheid-style conscription. Instead, it will focus on real and meaningful training, on a positive lifestyle, industrial skills, as well as job-relevant and entrepreneurial training that will prepare young people to become positive, contributing citizens.

Young people in South Africa need more than jobs and training. They need inspiration, mentorship and moral motivation. They need institutional and leadership mentorship that will help them to contribute positively to society. This will be an opportunity to guide, motivate and coach them, especially around the skills that are required by the economy.

n Depending on available resources and fiscal capacity, the duration of this programme will be negotiable and may last between two and three years. During their stay in such camps, these young people would be allocated a reasonable stipend and allowance that they can use to sustain themselves and supplement their destitute families who they have left behind and where possible, pay something towards their studies in preparation for leaving the programme.

n Properly conceptualised, the programmes can be co-financed through public-private partnerships, with the private-sector funding used to recognise and reward the contributing company’s skills and enterprise development initiatives.

With the support of the National Treasury, which must allocate minimally to this, the Departments of Labour and Higher Education must urgently design ways of re-engineering and improving the efficiency of the sector education and training authorities (Setas) to align them to outcome-based, practical training.

This will ensure that those young people who are enrolled at Setas, unlike in the current status quo, are significantly absorbed into the job market with relevant skills. The constitutionality and morality of this compulsory programme will be debated later.

While this intervention may not necessarily be a long-lasting solution, it will in the immediate and medium term, help to drastically reduce the backlog while long-term solutions are being sought.

 

* Attorney Thabo Masombuka is an economic transformation adviser and director at Siyakha Consulting, an empowerment advisory consultancy firm based in Bryanston.

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Pieter van Dam, wrote

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09:23am on 9 February 2012
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Conion is a form of slavery. Like imprisonment it removes the freedom of choice from the individual of how they want to "utilize" ones most important asset and right in life: i.e. oneself. If this is not protected in the Constitution then I am sad to say we don't have the best constitution in the world but the worst. A individuals right to freedom of choice is the highest order of all rights. Often there is a way to structure a need in a way which makes people willing participants in the process. I freely chose to enter into a bursary contract where I agreed to work a year (with a reasonable salary) for every year of tuition paid. (Thank you M&R - I am forever grateful). The government could start by removing university subsidies and then grant students who apply, bursaries of a similar amount with work commitments. The psychology is different: the individual goes from being a victim to being a grateful participant (in most cases)

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Anonymous, wrote

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05:09am on 9 February 2012
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It would cost billions and wouldn't generate a single job that wasn't entirely funded by the over-burdoned taxpayer. Besides, the general ineptitude of the military would ensure a complete disaster, probably even armed rebellion.

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correspondent, wrote

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08:07pm on 8 February 2012
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yes i agree, although we did not agree with it, the army taught me many useful skills, like polishing shoes, making beds, intense hygiene, first aid and life skills.. ironing etc..

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Anonymous, wrote

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04:56pm on 8 February 2012
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Said this looong ago. Dicipline. Like the SSB after the 2nd World War. Taught many returning soldiers skills and there were farms near Warrenton I think. Problem is with a with a well trained and well skilled army you have to use it someday. As per Germany in 1939.

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Edd, wrote

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02:43pm on 8 February 2012
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So now we want the SADF to provide our youth with industrial skills? A clear admission that tertiary education and the job market are totally screwed up in SA. My son go into the SADF today? No chance.

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Anonymous, wrote

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01:56pm on 8 February 2012
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If the government can't even get basic eduction in schools right to teach pupils how to read and write, what chance of success with this scheme? A similar vocational training scheme some years ago failed dismally with not enough trainers available and this is just a repeat of that under another name. More waste of taxpayer money yet again! When will people learn that you can't solve problems with money only - you also need brains.

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Graham F, wrote

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01:15pm on 8 February 2012
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How will conion into the armed forces give them all the benefits mentioned plus entrepreneurship? they need to go to training colleges, etc.

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@meriamerai, wrote

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10:39am on 8 February 2012
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Dear Thabo Your idea of conion as a solution is interesting, but will be extremely expensive. How about we rather spend the same effort to fix up our schooling system.

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Willie, wrote

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10:11am on 8 February 2012
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Once again, he has sidestepped the real issue. This may get people off the streets but at the taxpayers expense. All we require for employment is to revise labour legislation and business regulation so that there is an insentive to employ people. Current minimum wages and protectionism of labour frightens industry and prospective business off employment and encourages mechanisiation instead. Probably a million jobs have been shed in agriculture alone due to labour legislation. It also frightens off overseas investors. Business leaders have been telling the government this for ywears and they wont listen.

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samuel, wrote

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10:08am on 8 February 2012
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it is true that young people have been given a raw deal,even those who have been absorbed into the defence have not been given proper training and some are just languishing in defence barracks with nothing to do.Alchohol abuse,rapes and theft have become a norm in defence barracks because people are just idling there.Take stock of the MSD PROGRAMME,the results are very poor and young people are not trained to be job viable.Most leave the defence with no skill at all when their contracts expire.Training opportunities in the defence have been scaled down and cancelled in some areas.It is not as easy as it is being said in the media that join the defence and you will get some skills,things are difficult,no mentors and no proper training progrmmes except basic military training.

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Siener Piet, wrote

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09:39am on 8 February 2012
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Brilliant idea Thabo.Especially in the absence of anything else that is as comprehensive and practical as this idea of yours. Currently, all we see are biased and self enriching fancily named entities with eyes for only certain connected youth so far.The fatcats that head the current entities cant even think up something as inclusive and collective as what you have just done.Congrats. I propose that your services replace one of this selfserving good for nothing individuals that are currently drawing huge salaries from nayda and other so called youth developement masquarades but cant think of anything creative to address youth unemployment in our country.

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SANDFtroopie, wrote

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09:28am on 8 February 2012
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I would like to know what SKILL excatly will one con walk away with? An HIV certificate is not good enough for employment. I have yet to use one of my skills learned in the SANDF, in fact my forced conion did nothing but pay me pittance and took two years of my life and tried to indocrinate me into a government policy I could nt agree with. (That of killing my fellow South Africans becuase of their skin colour). One must always remember the SANDF issues you a weapon as your tool - this object has one purpose only to kill. You can't plough with it, you can't build with it, you can't do shit but kill with it!

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zale, wrote

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09:23am on 8 February 2012
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we have become used to the zuma language.. all talk no action..Anc is basically failing at everything it touches

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Johnnie Vercuil, wrote

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09:08am on 8 February 2012
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We will hear the very same old story again,and next year it will be the same again.

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Berni, wrote

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09:07am on 8 February 2012
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NO!!! Hitler employed the same tactics and look where that got the world! Give SME's the necessary tax breaks for employing the young and inexperienced and support up and coming entrepreneurs! Stop giving handouts, start giving hands up!!! If someone gets trained by the government they need to pay it forward to their community. You want a grant... you have to perform community service in your community. NO MORE MAHALA!!!

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Ayet, wrote

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09:02am on 8 February 2012
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So to fight unemployment, you want the youth to be trained in weapons handling so that they can become arme robbers? Mr Lawyer, go and do some more thinking before you come out with half baked ideas.

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Hempie, wrote

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08:20am on 8 February 2012
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Giving formal military training to anyone with a "shoot the boer" mentality is not a good idea.

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