
SAFTU Launches Task Team to Confront Job Loss Crisis in South Africa
8hours ago
JOHANNESBURG, 9 Sept 2025- The National Employers’ Association of South Africa (NEASA) has issued a stark warning: the country’s steel and engineering sector is facing an existential threat that has already wiped out an estimated 10,000 jobs and could lead to widespread deindustrialization without urgent government intervention.
Citing a toxic combination of rigid wage laws, soaring operating costs, and ill-conceived protectionist policies, NEASA CEO Gerhard Papenfus revealed that the association’s membership has plummeted from 1,800 firms to just 1,500 over the past six years—a direct indicator of the sector’s rapid decline.
Papenfus emphasized that the crisis extends far beyond corporate balance sheets, posing a severe threat to South Africa’s social fabric.
“We cannot afford to have more than half of our population sitting idle. Youth unemployment is above 60%. Grants cannot replace the dignity and hope of earning a living,” he stated, cautioning that the current path could lead to greater instability.
He also forcefully dismissed growing calls from some trade unions for the renationalization of key industries, calling the idea disastrous. “If anyone believes the state can run these industries more efficiently than the private sector, they are mistaken. Protectionism and government intervention have already undermined competitiveness.”
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NEASA is calling for immediate and decisive reforms across three key areas to avert a total collapse:
“The sector is bleeding jobs daily. Without decisive action, we face deindustrialization on a massive scale,” Papenfus warned.
The message is clear: without a fundamental shift in policy, South Africa’s industrial heartland is at risk of stopping beating, with devastating consequences for the entire economy.
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