Cosatu says job creation must come before empowerment

Linda Ensor, Business Day, Johannesburg, 4 March 2010
CAPE TOWN — Broad-based black economic empowerment (BBBEE) should be
subordinated to the imperatives of a job-creating industrial policy,
the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) said yesterday.
To this end, the BBBEE laws should be amended to prevent “import
fronting”, whereby black- owned companies won government tenders but
simply imported their inputs to the detriment of local companies and
jobs. Cosatu said the fact that much of the procurement for the
government’s 2010 infrastructure development programme had been
imported was “scandalous”.
Another proposal emerging from the labour movement’s submissions to
Parliament’s trade and industry committee on the new industrial policy
action plan was the National Union of Metalworkers of SA’s (Numsa’s)
call for steel giant ArcelorMittal (previously state- owned Iscor) and
petrochemical producer Sasol to be “re-nationalised” because of their
important position in the value chain of production.
“The pricing system of ArcelorMittal undermines our industrialising
agenda,” Numsa said.
Cosatu also suggested a tax on short-term capital flows to stabilise
the exchange rate, higher taxes on luxury and nonessential imports and
a restructuring of the tax system to promote investment in targeted
sectors.
Cosatu second deputy president Zingiswa Losi and industrial policy
co-ordinator Jonas Mosia said the federation was concerned about the
abuse of BEE. “While in the past we saw massive outsourcing and
privatisation with consequent job losses to promote narrow BEE,
fronting is the new tendency emerging.”
Cosatu also called for the restructuring of development finance
institutions “to ensure that they promote a developmental agenda rather
than operating on the basis of risk assessment similar to private
capitalist banks”. The Industrial Development Corporation Act should
also be amended to ensure that its funding promoted labour- intensive
sectors and decent work.
Both labour and Business Unity SA (Busa) stressed the importance of
co-ordination between government departments and other stakeholders if
the action plan was to succeed. The buy-in of state-owned enterprises
would be critical.
While Cosatu highlighted the importance of changes in macroeconomic
policies on inflation and the currency, Busa stressed that existing
constraints on doing business had to be addressed if South African
firms were to become competitive.
[email protected]
From: http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/Content.aspx?id=95302



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Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 3/04/2010 08:00:00 AM

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