Wage deal death for small business

National Union of Metal Workers in South Africa (Numsa) secretary general Irvin Jim is seen during a news conference in Johannesburg on Monday, 28 July 2014. Jim announced that they have accepted a wage offer in the metals and engineering sector. Over 200,000 Numsa members in the metal and engineering sector downed tools on July 1, demanding a salary increase of 12 percent, down from their pre-strike demand of 15 percent. The settlement offer included a 10 percent wage increase every year for the lowest paid members for the next three years, he said.Jim said workers would start returning to work on Tuesday. Picture: Werner Beukes/SAPA

National Union of Metal Workers in South Africa (Numsa) secretary general Irvin Jim is seen during a news conference in Johannesburg on Monday, 28 July 2014. Jim announced that they have accepted a wage offer in the metals and engineering sector. Over 200,000 Numsa members in the metal and engineering sector downed tools on July 1, demanding a salary increase of 12 percent, down from their pre-strike demand of 15 percent. The settlement offer included a 10 percent wage increase every year for the lowest paid members for the next three years, he said.Jim said workers would start returning to work on Tuesday. Picture: Werner Beukes/SAPA

Published Jul 30, 2014

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Johannesburg - The wage agreement in the metals and engineering sector is the death knell for small businesses, the Free Market Foundation said on Wednesday.

“The recent developments in the negotiations reflect the unholy alliance between unions and big business. Big business (represented by Seifsa) has agreed to increases for the next three years without being concerned about the impact on small businesses,” FMF chairman Herman Mashaba said in a statement.

“The reality is that this agreement sounds the death knell to thousands of smaller companies in the sector.”

Six unions in the metals and engineering sector signed a wage deal with most employers on Tuesday.

According to the new wage deal, workers would get increases of between eight and 10 percent, depending on whether they were high or low earners.

But one of the employer bodies, the National Employers' Association of SA (Neasa) refused to sign the offer, saying it had been sidelined in the negotiation process, facilitated by the labour department.

As a result, Neasa, which has 22 members and employs about 70,000 workers, has vowed to continue with a lock-out of striking workers.

Over 200,000 National union of Mineworkers of SA members downed tools on July 1, demanding a salary increase of 12 percent, down from their pre-strike demand of 15 percent. They also demanded a R1000 housing allowance, and a total ban on labour brokers.

Mashaba said Neasa was refusing to sign because it saw through the agreement and the devastating impact it would have on smaller firms and employment prospects.

“As an entrepreneur and businessman, I know first hand the risks of employing even one extra worker.”

On 4 March 2013, the FMF filed a challenge in the High Court in Pretoria to Section 32 of the Labour Relations Act 1995.

The organisation said the clause allowed collective agreements on wages and conditions to be extended to employers who were not party to the negotiations.

According to the FMF, some bargaining council agreements imposed unaffordable wages and conditions on smaller employers who consequently reduced their workforce and could not employ more workers.

Mashaba called on Small Business Development Minister Lindiwe Zulu to take action.

“Minister Zulu, please make this your first priority. Act to save small firms in the metal and engineering industry by intervening to prevent this agreement being extended to non-parties.”

Sapa

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