Type | Report |
Title | Temporary employment services in South Africa: Assessing the industry’s economic contribution |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
Publisher | Labour Market Intelligence Partnership (LMIP) |
URL | http://www.lmip.org.za/sites/default/files/documentfiles/Temporary employment services in SouthAfrica.pdf |
Abstract | Despite experiencing one of the longest periods of uninterrupted economic growth since the 1960s, South Africa in the democratic era faces possibly one of its most intractable policy challenges, namely that of an extraordinarily high rate of unemployment. By any reasonable assumption with regard to country comparisons, South Africa thus has one of the highest International Labour Organizationdefined unemployment rates in the world. In this upper middle-income country, the data show that, on average over a 20-year period, one out of every four members of the labour force is jobless. In the period since 1994, though, employment has steadily increased at a rate consistent with economic growth. Of particular importance, however, and the focus of this paper, is to try to understand the nature of employment changes and their impact in one particular sector, namely the temporary employment services (TES) industry. The sector, colloquially known in South Africa as the ‘labour broker’ sector, has grown rapidly and is now a key feature of the South African economy and its labour market. |
» | South Africa - Labour Market Dynamics in South Africa 2012 |