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The Vision for the Post-1994 Labour Market C C M A 1 5 TH HALTON CHEADLE ANNIVERSARY – THINK TANK 10 NOVEMBER 2011 PRESENTATION OUTLINE  The challenges at the time  Policy and legislative responses  Vision for the post-1994 labour market CHALLENGES  The new government faced a terrible legacy of extreme inequality and high unemployment  mass unemployment and poverty  discrimination and inequality  intense conflict at the workplace  low levels of productivity  shortage of managerial and technical skills required to drive an economy  Sluggish employment growth  economy increasingly open to international competition POLICY & LEGISLATIVE RESPONSES  Constitutional rights  RDP’s employment related objectives  Policies underlying the LRA  NEDLAC Act  Labour Market Commission (Presidential Commission to investigate labour market policy (Report in June 1996)  EEA, BCEA, SDA THE RDP’s VISION  Eradication of poverty through “more and better” jobs  Worker participation  The elimination of racial and gender-based discrimination in the labour market  Productivity enhancement  A stable macroeconomic environment LABOUR MARKET COMMISSION  Terms of reference  To develop labour market policies to meet the RDP  Voice regulation at all levels  Balance between labour market security and flexibility  National Productivity Accord  Productivity-enhancing work organisation  Institutionalised co-ordination THE EMERGENCE OF A POST-1994 VISION  “Regulated flexibility”  A growth path with job creation and strong economic development  Increased private sector investment to underpin employment growth including the IDC’s development finance and support measures for small, medium and micro-enterprises  Labour market policies co-ordinated with macroeconomic policies by means of a national Accord for Employment and Growth involving all of the social partners  Macroeconomic, industrial and trade policies that promote employment and do not focus only on driving down inflation THE POST-1994 VISION  Management of global competition - increasing efficiency in the utilisation of domestic resources, both labour and capital, as the basis for effective engagement in international markets  Reforms in the labour market to promote flexibility, where flexibility is understood as a multi-faceted concept that is not merely a euphemism for lower real wages or weak unions  Protection of individual rights and labour market security  The balance between flexibility and security achieved through the mechanism of voice regulation - bargained arrangements between strong, stable and well-informed employer and employee representatives THE POST-1994 VISION  Promotion of collective bargaining  Institutional framework  Nedlac  Sectoral bargaining through bargaining councils  Workplace forums THE POST-1994 VISION  Employment equity – affirmative action without quotas but the emphasis on the role of collective bargaining and participatory workplace structures in developing employment equity plans  Skills development with recognition of prior learning  Workplace-based training with transportable skills and qualifications THE VISION FOR NEDLAC  Policy-making at the highest level  Consensus based  Tripartism  A forum for negotiating legislation prior to normal legislative processes  Demarcation of sectors THE LRA’S VISION  Social justice and economic development  Freedom of association  Organisational rights to stabilise union organisation  Promotion of collective bargaining – both at workplace and sectoral level  Establishment and consolidation of bargaining councils  Framework agreements at sectoral level  Productivity bargaining at plant level  Less adversarialism and meaningful consultation at all levels THE LRA’S VISION  Speedy dispute resolution with the emphasis on meaningful consensus- seeking approaches  Recognition of the right to strike with relatively non-technical processes to follow  Interest arbitration of essential services disputes  Relative labour peace – no strikes over dismissals and thorough mediation before strike action  Codified, clear law on unfair dismissals with final and binding arbitration; limited grounds for review  Limited concept of the unfair labour practice  Simple workplace disciplinary processes QUESTIONS  Why have we not achieved more consensual, rather than less adversarial engagements?  Has NEDLAC succeeded as an effective tripartite institution?  Is collective bargaining playing a constructive economic role  Is there sufficient progress on productivity and skills development?  Is it too easy to strike?  Is it too easy to refer disputes? QUESTIONS  Why have unions not followed organisational and strategic approaches to changes in the labour market?  What is the scope for job creation agreements, perhaps with lower wages for new entrants?  What role can the CCMA play to achieve the original vision?