One of the
consistent demands by workers is for wages that are ‘decent’, ‘living’ or
similar terms. Employers are
consistently criticised for paying wages that are too low. The use of Labour Brokers is viewed as evil
and anti-democratic, primarily because a part of the cost to the ultimate
employer accrues to the broker, rather than to the worker, as it would in a
direct employment relationship.
One of the
very important factors that appears to be forgotten in this discussion is that
workers have a right and an ability to select their employer, and one might
reasonably believe that those workers do so rationally. An employee has the right to terminate the
employment relationship in a way that is not open to the employer. The employee can decide to move to another
employer without giving any reason, and with a short notice period. The employee is not obliged to pay
compensation to the employer for such termination, even though the employer
might have invested a considerable sum in the training and development of the
employee. It is not unusual for an
employer to carry the cost of the employee for some time, ranging from a couple
of months to a couple of years, before the employee reaches a level of
capability to actually earn the wage he or she is paid. The employer, on the other hand, cannot
simply terminate the employment relationship without cause. It is usually obliged to pay some
compensation to the employee for the termination, usually based on the length
of the employment.
The
corollary of the freedom of movement of the employee is that he or she has the
ability to leave an employer to seek employment with another employer for any
reason, including the level of wages paid, the benefits, the working conditions
or any other imaginable cause. In these
conditions, the probability exists that the wage paid will amount to what the
workers’ contributions are really worth.
Stability, in an economic sense, will be achieved. Employment will, once again, represent a
situation in which Party A trades what he or she is able to offer to Party B.
Of course,
the ideal market will quickly show up the advantages or disadvantages of each
participant. Labour will flow to the
employer able to extract the greatest utility from it. Workers with greater capabilities will be
paid more than those with lesser capabilities.
The market will force each participant to maximise its’ or his or her,
benefits to the other. Higher
qualifications, including education, training, skill, willingness to put in an
honest day’s work, will be rewarded, and lack of those qualifications will be
punished by lower rewards. That is how
the world works, on a scale of countries, and on a scale of person to person,
even at the housewife-maid level. Any
action taken in an attempt to enforce different rules will ultimately result in
a flow of economic activity away from that market inefficiency to a more
economically beneficial place. The
introduction of a minimum wage for household workers resulted in a massive loss
of jobs in that sector. The imposition
of high wages for miners has resulted in the number of mining jobs halving
within a decade. The dominance of
Union-inspired wage and working conditions has resulted in South Africa
becoming one of the slowest-growing economies on the continent.
The origins
of the Trade Unions lie in the old conditions, in which the employee was
comparatively immobile and the employer was, in all likelihood, one of a very
few employment possibilities in the area.
The employee was, in all probability, bound to a particular
employer. It was necessary to regulate
the conduct of the employer, to ensure that the employees had a reasonable
deal.
Those
conditions no longer apply. Employees
have a wide variety of employment possibilities and opportunities. If there are not enough such opportunities in
the area in which the employee lives, he or she is free to move to another
area, as is frequently done. There has
been a massive migration between employment areas. Half the population of the Northern Cape has migrated away from that
Province in search of employment. A
large proportion of the Eastern Cape has moved
to Gauteng or the Western Cape in search of employment. The problems at Marikana and numerous other
mines have illustrated how many workers come from other areas, even other
countries, to obtain employment at those mines.
This is not the fault of the mining companies. They fulfil their economic function in making
employment possibilities available. If a
worker migrates from another area to take up those opportunities, it is at the
choice of the worker. It is a clear
indication that the worker is not able to find a comparable employment
opportunity in his or her own area. The
mine owner cannot be blamed for that condition.
The
emergence of Trades Unions was justified in the circumstances of the time and
place. Over time, they became a
business, generating a good income for the management of the Unions, and they
evolved ever more clearly to becoming organisations for the protection of the
members, not for the advancement of society.
By virtue of their size, they became a more dominant force that the
businesses that gave their foundation cause – there are dozens more employees
of businesses than there are business owners – and they have used that
dominance to exert influence on Governments and on society. In a way, the myths that they perpetuate have
become something of a religion. Very few
people ever question them or their real purposes, and it is easy to justify
their existence to the members – they are preaching to the converted.
However, in
this day of rampant DEMOCRACY, it might be wise to question some of the
fundamentals of the current order.
Unions do
not create jobs. In many ways, they
destroy them, and by so doing, they act against the fundamental interests of
society. Businesses create jobs.
The unions
have achieved a situation of crass inequality vis a vis the employers. When did you last hear of business owners
marching to demand lower wages and better work contributions by employees? When do businesses simply walk out on their
employees, except in conditions in which the businesses are no longer viable
(often because the cost of labour and their associated expenses have become
prohibitively high)? When a business
fails, who enjoys preference in payment from the assets? The business owners are the last to stand in
the queue for distribution of assets, while the employees enjoy preference
second only to the South Africa Revenue Services, a parasite that made no
contribution to the existence of the business in return for the blood it sucked
out of that business. And then, to cap
it all, Patrick Craven, the spokesman for Cosatu, claims that the employees
carry a much greater risk than the business owners! If he was saying what he and his organisation
believe, it is a frightening thought that the organisation that claims to
provide a reasonable interface between employers and employees can have so
little understanding of the reality of the economic situation.
It is worth
stating the facts again. Businesses
create jobs. Employees do not. Without businesses, there would be no
employees, no tax, no Trades Unions.
Is it not
time to reconsider the balance of the relationships between labour and
employers? Is it not essential to give
businesses an equal say, and equal force, in the relations between them and
employees? If the mutual conditions were
to become more fair, there is a good possibility that the potential for
conflict between the two groups will be reduced, and that will be good for all,
except, possibly, the Trades Unions, which would find that their role will be
reduced to what they claim it to be – reducing the imbalance between employers
and employees. It would also act to
ensure that businesses remain in South Africa , or come here, to
create the jobs that are needed, rather than seeking an environment abroad,
where they will be rewarded for the risk, the capital investment and the
contributions of skills, innovation and effort that they make.
It is
essential for the South African economy to become more free, more fair, and
more democratic if the South African citizens are to enjoy the sort of growth
that is an absolute essential.
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