News


Manufacturing in South Africa: give our youth a chance

19 September 2012 News

Cheap imports are slowly suffocating the local manufacturing sector. The consumer, from the well-heeled to the low income earner, goes for quality and value for money. South African manufacturers cannot compete: the uncompetitive cost of labour and raw materials makes it close to impossible.

This means we need to consider new models. This is South Africa – a land rich in resources, with 26% unemployment and a youth bulge. Add a little empowerment, some innovation, a spadeful of entrepreneurship… and possibilities begin to emerge that could give us that foothold we need to really become part of the global economy.

The youth of today leave school clutching their hard-won basic secondary certificates full of hope. They want to go to college, university, find a good job. Sadly, for many it remains a dream.

In the factories where low-level repetitive skills are required, the overwhelming majority of those employed are late middle-age men and women earning R35 to R40 an hour. They have been in these positions for many years. Many of them do not have the aptitude or ambition to improve their skills and knowledge, or take on greater responsibility.

Conversely, there are people with tertiary qualifications and degrees working at these jobs because there are no jobs for them in their chosen fields in the commercial sector. There is a lot wrong with this picture.

The older workers hold onto their jobs. The unions fight for higher wages. Labour legislation makes it impossible to employ competitively. There is no place for the youth – who wants to employ an unproven worker with no practical skills at the wage government and the unions demand?

Everyone loses

The youth who needs an opportunity to work to discover his/her aptitude, talent or interest, has no real opportunity to do so. The business must overpay a long-service worker with limited skills to do a low-level job. The manufacturing industry does not get fresh blood and succession. The economy remains stagnant and shrinks because businesses become uncompetitive and must close their doors.

The youth have no skills. Entrepreneurship is stunted because those who have the fire and will, and are willing to take the risk to start something new, have no opportunity to begin to understand the fundamentals of business, manufacture, production, trade … and identify gaps and opportunity.

A week in China

We could take a page from the copybooks of emerging countries that are showing growth – if we were brave enough to move to new models.

A week in China puts things into perspective: factory workers, tool makers and managers are young, and they earn the equivalent of about R20 an hour. The country has a thriving manufacturing sector that regulations and strategic import/export policies are fashioning into an ever higher-value earnings model.

Or look at what Japan has achieved. Thirty years ago, Japanese lucky packets filled with cheap toys were what we recognised the country for, then it became known for its cheap motor vehicles. Today, the Japanese economy is wealthy, complex, thriving. From small beginnings…

Early sustained intervention

In South Africa, the youth of 1976 made an incredible statement. They had expectations, rights that were being abused. They spoke. The youth, in any country, is the future of that country. In Africa, the youth represent a dual challenge and opportunity.

A 2011 Brenthurst Foundation study, ‘Putting Young Africans to Work, Addressing Africa’s youth unemployment crisis,’ looked at the youth bulge in Africa, including South Africa. The statistics it provides are mind boggling.

At present, 20% of the global population is between the ages of 15 and 24. In Africa, by 2025, two-thirds of our population will be under 25 years of age. Globally, by 2025, African youth will represent one quarter of the world’s under-25 population.

Consider the potential advantage that could represent for Africa in the global economy. Instead, our youth are unemployed, badly educated, with little hope of new or quality jobs, no on-the-job learning opportunities, a Seta-led apprenticeship model that has failed, and little prospect of acquiring further education.

The answer for many of the disillusioned is likely to be emigration. For those without that opportunity, civil protest and crime may be the only outlet, leading to political instability and negative economic growth.

The Brenthurst Foundation study offers some answers. It highlights a common emphasis from across sectors – government, business, those concerned with policy implementation and academia, and civil society – for governments to reduce the costs of formalisation for businesses and workers alike if they are to address this challenge.

It goes on: “This requires creating an environment in which labour is more productive and opportunities for innovation and growth are created – largely by government setting the right conditions and then getting out of the way. It is business, not government, that will put young Africans to work in sufficient numbers to turn the continent’s population time bomb into a demographic boon.”

Nation building from the bottom up

Raw pigment becomes a masterpiece, base metal a tool. In South Africa we have an eager and youthful labour force. People want jobs. Without doubt we could stimulate the manufacturing sector by introducing new models of employee engagement that also drive skills growth and, very likely, entrepreneurship.

It is not just about on-the-job experience; identifying aptitude and interest has a lot to do with exposure. Understanding production, process and business principles like demand and supply, supply chain and market dynamics is what stimulates entrepreneurship.

Let us face it, we may never again be able to compete on price or output volumes with larger global manufacturers – many manufacturing sectors in South Africa have simply fallen too far behind. But we can start small in high-value sectors where we have unique advantages.

Formal employment needs to become easier and less of a burden to business. At the same time, the civil rights of individuals must be protected. Some answers may be the establishment of a youth wage, a government subsidy for youth employment, or tax incentives for business to employ the youth. Business is keen; it sees the advantages.

Dave MacDonald.
Dave MacDonald.

For more information contact Dave MacDonald, Jasco Electrical Manufacturers, +27 (0)31 579 4701, [email protected], www.jasco.co.za





Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

From the editor's desk: AI – a double-edged sword
Technews Publishing News
As with any powerful tool, AI presents challenges, some of which, if not carefully managed, threaten to undo the potential that it can offer.

Read more...
Global semiconductor sales increase
News
The Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) has announced global semiconductor sales were $57,0 billion during the month of April 2025, an increase of 2,5% compared to the March 2025.

Read more...
Avnet Abacus announced new president
Avnet Abacus News
Avnet Abacus has announced that Mario Merino will succeed Rudy Van Parijs as president of Avnet Abacus, effective 1 July 2025.

Read more...
Avnet Abacus wins multiple prestigious awards
Avnet Abacus News
The awards from Molex recognise outstanding performance, collaboration, and significant growth in the challenging market conditions of 2024.

Read more...
Components distribution slowdown Q1 2025
News
European components distribution (DMASS) experienced a continued slowdown in the first quarter 2025.

Read more...
Semiconductor sales increase 17% YoY
News
The Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) recently announced global semiconductor sales were $54,9 billion during the month of February 2025, an increase of 17,1% compared to the February 2024 total.

Read more...
Silicon Labs – Q1 results
News
Silicon Labs, a leading innovator in low-power wireless, recently reported financial results for the first quarter, which ended April 5, 2025.

Read more...
Strengthening industry through strategic partnerships at KITE 2025
Specialised Exhibitions News
The KwaZulu-Natal Industrial Technology Exhibition is not just an exhibition, it is a powerhouse of industry collaboration where visitors and exhibitors gain access to authoritative insights, technical expertise, and high-impact networking opportunities.

Read more...
Solar Youth Project calls on industry to step up
News
With the second cohort completed training and the first cohort returning for their final module, host companies are urgently needed to turn the training into a long-term opportunity.

Read more...
Conlog powers SA’s future with national smart meter rollout
News
Conlog recently secured the RT29-2024 contract from National Treasury, which is seen to be a major milestone towards modernising SA’s utility infrastructure.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved