This news aggregator site highlights South African labour news from a wide range of internet and print sources. Each posting has a synopsis of the source article, together with a link or reference to the original. Postings cover the range of labour related matters from industrial relations to generalist human resources.
Last Update: 08-08-2025
In our afternoon roundup, see summaries
of our selection of South African labour-
related stories that appeared
on Monday, 6 November 2017.
Business Report writes that the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) has called for an investigation into rising fatalities in the mining industry after two mineworkers died last week at AngloGold Ashanti’s Mponeng Mine, near Carletonville in North West. Six other miners are recovering in hospital following a fall-of-ground incident that was triggered by a seismic event of 1.1 magnitude at 3.6km around 9.30am on Thursday.
“A thorough investigation is needed to get to the bottom of the fatalities,” Erick Gcilitshana, NUM health and safety secretary said on Friday.
Gcilitshana said the increasing number of fall-of-ground incidents, particularly in Klerksdorp and Carletonville, was worrying. Two mineworkers died at the Mponeng mine in October, while two others died at AngloGold’s Kopanang mine in September due to fall-of-ground incidents.
Four mineworkers died in July at the Tau Lekoa mine, owned by Heaven Sent a Chinese venture capital firm, following a fall-of-ground incident and five others died at Harmony Gold’s Kusasalethu mine in August.
“It is a point for serious concern for us. The principals, including chief executives, unionists and the officials from the Department of Mineral Resources, need to come together and discuss safety and how to achieve the vision of zero harm,” said Gcilitshana.
Deputy Mineral Resources Minister, Godfrey Oliphant said last month that the department had called for an urgent meeting to address fatalities in mines.
Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane in August appealed for extra caution to be taken on health and safety in the mines, following the accident at the Kusasalethu mine. He said at the time: “We are concerned about the accidents we are seeing in the industry. As we head towards the last quarter of the year, we are asking that employers and the workforce remain alert and continue to prioritise safety, and as the regulator we will be increasing inspections,” Zwane said at the time.
The DA on Friday said that it was concerned by news of yet another underground incident at the Mponeng mine in Carletonville. “Yesterday’s incident was the third at the mine in just over a month. South African mines are some of the deepest in the world and although they have become much safer in the last few years, there is no room for complacency,” the DA said.
Read this report by Dineo Faku in full on page 18 of Business Report of 6 November 2017
Get other news reports at the SA Labour News home page
In our weekend roundup, see summaries
of our selection of South African labour-related
stories that appeared since midafternoon
on Friday, 3 November 2017.
In our Thursday roundup, see summaries
of our selection of South African labour-
related stories that appeared since
midafternoon on Wednesday, 25 October 2017.
Business Report writes that the National Treasury on Wednesday pleaded for a “fair and reasonable compromise” between the government and state employees in the current round of wage talks, charging that this was in the public interest.
Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba said there needed to be an appreciation that the country was going through tough economic times and that public sector wage agreements must be affordable to the current fiscal framework. “The government will approach the wage negotiations with a view to getting the best deal in the current fiscal framework so that the deal we arrive at is affordable to the fiscus,” he said.
The Treasury said state employees’ compensation spending had grown more quickly than the overall budget in the past eight years, and accounted for 35.3 percent of consolidated expenditure in 2016/17, up from 32.9 percent in 2008/09.
In documents released yesterday as part of the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement process, the Treasury said that since 2011 the government had been forced to restrict employee head count growth to accommodate rising salaries. Spending on compensation has continued to grow more quickly than nominal gross domestic product.
“A new civil service wage agreement in which salary increases exceed Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation, and without headcount reductions, would render the current expenditure limits difficult to achieve.
“The Medium-Term Expenditure Framework provides for an overall increase of 7.3 percent a year to accommodate improvements in conditions of service. Many departments are already at risk of exceeding this limit, even assuming that personnel numbers do not increase,” according to the documents.
Cosatu spokesperson Sizwe Pamla said yesterday that the government needed to stop blaming teachers, nurses, police officers, prison warders, doctors and municipal street cleaners for the wage bill.
“It must reduce the out-of-control salaries of state-owned enterprises’ chief executives, executives and political office-bearers including the directors-general. We cannot blame nurses earning less than R200 000, while the chief executives of Transnet and Eskom are taking home more than R8 million annually,” Pamla said.
A CPI + 1 percent agreement would raise the national shortfall in 2018/19 to R8.2 billion, with the gap in provincial compensation budgets amounting to R4bn.
Negotiations on the next three year public-service wage agreement were under way. Public sector unions have already thrown down the gauntlet at the government, demanding salary increases of between 10 percent and 12 percent. One of the demands also advanced by the unions is a R2 500 housing allowance increase and the Public Investment Corporation investing in the Government Employees Housing Scheme.
Nazmeera Moola, the co-head of fixed income at Investec Asset Management, said that public sector wages needed to be controlled to stabilise the budget. “The two problems relating to public sector wages are the persistently high above-inflation wage increases and the dramatic growth in senior management positions, particularly among teachers, nurses and police,” Moola said.
The original of this report by Kabelo Khumalo appeared on page 21 of Business Report of 26 October 2017
Get other news reports at the SA Labour News home page