SUMMARY OF AGREEMENTS
All constituencies made commitments to work for more jobs,
better jobs anddecent work for all
This includes:
- Public Investment Initiatives in partnership with the private
sector. Many of these initiatives will be mainstream infrastructure
projects with a very strong construction and labour-based
component.
- Expanded Public Works Programmes to provide poverty and income
relief and equip participants with some training and work
experience.
- Sector Partnerships and Strategies for effective restructuring
of the economy towards equitable employment by creating growth
through prioritising efforts in the following labour-intensive
sectors:
- Clothing and Textiles
- Agriculture and Agro-processing
- Tourism
- Call Centres and back-office processing
- Cultural industries including craft, music, film, publishing
and other media.
Sector strategies are already being pursued in a number of
sectors:
- Automotive
- Mining
- Clothing and textiles
- Printing
- Agriculture
- Business also committed to investing R145 billion the next five
years in the automotive, chemical, mining and oil sectors. The
metals and engineering, pharmaceutical, sugar and textile
industries have made specific commitments with regards to
investments, although these have not been quantified.
- Promoting local procurement resulting in the promotion
of:
- Retention and creation of jobs
- Broad-based black economic empowerment (BEE)
- Co-operative development
- Small enterprise development
- Growing the local economy
The constituencies agreed to intensify their support for the
Proudly South African Campaign as an important means of taking the
message of local content, fair labour standards, environmental
sustainability and quality products and services to the nation.
- Small enterprise promotion with Multi-Purpose Community Centres
(MPCCs) and other service centres as focal points.
- Business will consider extending the Business Trust beyond its
original five-year lifespan, including specific Business Trust
programmes such as the Tourism Enterprise programme.
- Support for co-operatives with government implementing a
regulatory system promoting the role of co-operatives in achieving
greater equity.
- Jobs impact and monitoring programmes to develop a practical
method to look at how the public and private sectors can report on
total employment in a publicly accessible form.
All constituencies made commitments to work towards
addressing the investment challenge
- Constituencies have agreed to encourage investors to work
towards investing up to 5% of their investible income in
appropriate financial instruments that will be developed.
- Constituencies have agreed to review administered prices and
import parity pricing to identify current practices that might
discourage investment.
- Constituencies have agreed that the share of lowincome housing
financed by private-sector mortgages must increase.
- Constituencies have agreed that Nedlac should host a conference
of the trustees of pension and provident funds before the end of
2004 in order to build capacity of employee representatives on
Boards of Trustees, in order to enhance decision-making with regard
to the proposed extension of investment instruments.
- Constituencies have also agreed to engage on the potential for
establishing national pension and provident funds within sector of
the economy. This will be considered within the broader context of
pension reform to ensure the comprehensiveness of the changes.
- Constituencies have agreed to implement the Financial Sector
Summit agreements.
All constituencies made commitments to advancing equity,
developing skills, creating opportunities for all and extending
services
- Broad-based Black Economic Empowerment
Government made a commitment of R10 billion for BEE over the next
five years. Business confirmed its support and promotion of BEE. A
voluntary youth solidarity fund will be established, and
youthorganisations will invite all employed youth to contribute one
day's gross salar y to youthdevelopment programmes.
- Employment equity
Government committed to co-ordinate a joint campaign to enhance
public awareness of the provisions of the Employment Equity Act,
1998 by August 2003. Business undertook to contribute resources to
the joint Employment Equity Campaign; and labour said it would
educate its members on employment equity and mobilise them to
participate in the Campaign.
- Promoting literacy including working through Sector Education
and Training Authorities (SETAs) for the achievement of the first
objectives of the National Skills Development Strategy.
- Learnerships - business and the Public Service committed to
register at least 72 000 unemployed learners in learnerships by May
2004.
- Strengthening the SETAs - constituencies committed to ensuring
that their SETA representatives are capacitated to effectively
execute their functions.
- Education
Government will finalise recommendations to achieve the aim of
affordable access for learners, particularly the poor. It will also
extend its current school register of needs to provide more
detailed information ofinfrastructure in all schools, and encourage
proposals to support infrastructure in schools.
- Access to basic services - government has already begun to
expand access to basic education for all, and to provide poor
households with some free basic services. These include timeframes
and targets for access to water, electricity, sanitation and refuse
collection.
- Government is in the process of finalising policy on
comprehensive framework for social protection, including social
wage and social grant issues. It will take the framework back to
Nedlac for engagement with the constituencies.
All constituencies made commitments to engage in local
action and implementation for development
- Local level planning
It was agreed that social dialogue should be strengthened
at the local level, so as to enhance the participation business,
labour and communities in Integrated Development Planning
processes. Constituencies also agreed to strengthen the Imbizo and
Letsema Campaigns, and encourage community participation in other
fora such as ward committees, school governing bodies and community
policing forums.
- Local economic development
The constituencies agreed that mechanisms should be found
to make it easier for SMEs and co-operatives to tender for local
government work. Government undertook to expand the number of
Multi-Purpose Community Centres (MPCCs) from 37 to 60 over the next
18 months, with an ultimate aim of having MPCCs in all 284
municipalities.
- Labour, through the Job Creation Trust, will support
small-scale projects that contribute to employment and skills
development. Business will use business entities at local level to
work with the Department of Trade and Industry to provide services
to emerging businesses.
- Provision of infrastructure and access to basic
services The constituencies agreed that there was space
for co-operation between local governments and other stakeholders
to develop new insfrastructure and improve existing
infrastructure
- Service-delivery mechanisms
Government undertook to enhance service delivery through
improvement of municipal infrastructure, particularly for the poor
as elaborated in government's programmes.
Business has committed to launch a Mentor Programme with
government to build emerging contractor capacity.
If appropriate finacial mechanisms are established, labour
committed to supporting the direction of financial resources,
including retirement funds, to low-income housing programmes that
support the densification and integration of communities.
Constituencies agreed that social dialogue should be
strenghtened at the local levels, so as to enhance the
participation of business, labour and communities in Integrated
Development Planning processes.