Title: Nedlac Principals
1Nedlac Principals
Government
Business
Labour
Community
Overall Convenors
2Nedlac Annual Report for The Period 2005/6
- Presentation to the Parliamentary Portfolio
Committee on Labour - 7 November 2006
3 The National Economic Development and Labour
Council (Nedlac) is the vehicle by which
government, labour, business and community based
organisations seek to cooperate, through
problem-solving and negotiation, on economic,
labour and development issues, and related
challenges facing the country.
Nedlac was Established Through An Enabling Act Of
Parliament. ( The National Economic Development
and Labour Council Act No. 35 of 1994.)
4HISTORICAL CONTEXT
- Nedlacs origins lie in the struggles against
apartheid, unilateral government - decision-making and calls from all sectors of
society for socio-economic - policy decisions to be made in a more inclusive
and transparent manner. - Through social dialogue build partnerships that
seek to, inter alia - Translate the principle of The people shall
govern into practice - Build and deepen the newly found Democracy
- Seek to formulate policies that are geared
towards - Addressing the high levels of poverty
- Addressing the high levels of unemployment
- Addressing the fact that SA is among countries
with highest levels of inequality in the world - Rebuilding and stimulating Economic Growth and
- Redressing the legacy of the Countrys racial
past -
5SCOPE AND BRIEF
- Strive to promote the goals of economic growth,
participation in economic decision-making and
social equity - Seek to reach consensus and conclude agreements
pertaining to social and economic policy - Consider all proposed labour legislation relating
to labour market policy before it is introduced
in parliament - Consider all significant changes to social and
economic policy before it is implemented or
introduced in parliament - Encourage and promote the formulation of
coordinated policy on social and economic matters
6 NEDLACS MODUS OPERANDI
- Protocol for tabling issues
- _at_ Nedlac
- Problem-solving
-
- Negotiation
- Consultation
- Information Sharing
- National Projects
- Dispute Resolution
7STRUCTURES
- Brings together 300 delegates the summit is
chaired by the Presidency. - Govt Ministers of Labour, Finance, Trade and
Industry and Public Works, - Business President and Chairperson of BUSA,
- Labour General Secretaries and Presidents of the
Fedusa, Cosatu and Nactu - Community Presidents and General secretaries of
community based Organisations
- NATIONAL ANNUAL SUMMIT
- EXECUTIVE COUNCIL has 72 seats-shared equally
among the four constituencies and is the highest
decision-making structure of Nedlac. -
8STRUCTURES
- 17 SEATS
- Four Overall Convenors.
- 9 Convenors from Labour market, Trade Industry
and Public Finance and Monetary Policy Chambers - 4 Convenors from the Development Chamber
- MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
- (MANCO)
-
9NEDLAC WORK STREAMS SCOPE
- Labour Market Policy matters
- Trade, Investment and Industrial Policy matters
- Fiscal and Monetary Policy matters
- Developmental Policy matters
- Standing Committee on trade
- Coordination of the GDS Implementation
- Resolution of Socio Economic Disputes
- Labour Market Chamber
- Trade and Industry Chamber
- Public Finance and Monetary Policy chamber
- Development Chamber
- Technical and Sectoral Liaison Committee
(Teselico) - GDS IMPLEMENTATION
- COMMITTEE
- Section 77 Matters
-
10Governance
- Nedlac was set up through an Act of Parliament-
Act No 35 of 1994 - Nedlac operations are governed by its
constitution - Nedlac is funded from Dept of Labours budget
- Four social partners, no party has a formal/
official veto - Mandated representatives of organised Nedlac
constituencies - Agreement-making on all social and economic
policy - Managed by representatives - Overall Convenors,
Management - Committee and the Executive Council
- Nedlac Secretariat administers the processes
11Nedlac Principals
Government
Business
Labour
Community
Overall Convenors
12NEDLAC STRUCTURE
13Nedlac Process Flow
- The nedlac process is guided by the protocol for
tabling and considering issues at Nedlac. - Government tables its programmes of policy and
legislation in Nedlac often at the beginning of
the year. - Labour, Business and the Community constituencies
likewise table issues for inclusion on the Work
Programme. - Each chamber then prioritises the issues to be
tackled - Management Committee ratifies the Work programme
- Issues are tabled at least six weeks before
sign-off is required - Parties agree at the outset whether the issue is
being tabled for consultation, negotiations or
both. - Parties then agree on a process and timeframes to
expedite the matter. -
- In cases where the issue falls within the terms
of reference of more than one chamber, a joint
negotiation committee or task team is
established.
14Nedlac Process Flow
- In cases where the issue falls within the terms
of reference of more than one chamber, a joint
negotiation committee or task team is
established. - There may also be instances where the
intervention of the relevant Minister/s may be
required. - In the event that government indicates that
giving effect to the policy requires legislation,
then government tables the draft Bill at Nedlac
for consideration. - Once the process of engagement on the policy has
been finalised, a Nedlac report is prepared for
ratification by MANCO and EXCO respectively. - Once the report has been signed-off it is then
sent to the relevant Minister who in turn tables
it in parliament. (A copy of the report is also
sent to the Minister of Labour and relevant
secretary of the relevant parliamentary
committee)
15RELATIONSHIP WITH PARLIAMENT AND MANAGING THE
PASSAGE OF NEDLAC AGREEMENTS IN PARLIAMENT
- Nedlac recognises the sovereignty of parliament
hence upholds its supremacy in the process of law
making. - Parties are bound not to re-open discussion in
Parliament on any area where agreement was
reached in Nedlac. - Nedlac social partners do get invited to address
parliamentary Committees when dealing with
issues- often as part of the general public
hearings and in some instances in special
sessions to address specific issues. - Parties have the right to raise issues in
parliament on which there had been no agreement,
or on which a Nedlac agreement was silent. - If parties raise issues during the parliamentary
process on which the Nedlac agreement was silent,
or new issues, which go beyond the reservations
captured in the Nedlac report, they should inform
Nedlac for the record.
16Programme Performance
- Nedlac hosted a successful Summit on 27 August
2005. - The summit was chaired by the Deputy President of
the Republic of South Africa - The focus session was on trade and social
dialogue. - The discussions on trade covered a range of
issues including China, WTO and SADC. - The debate dealt with the question of trade
liberalisation, its upside and downside and the
lessons for SA. - The debate on social dialogue examined the
relevance of social dialogue as a platform to
shape policy and build working partnerships to
tackle social, economic and developmental
challenges in SA.
17Programme Performance
- The Executive council convened 2 meetings in the
period under review - The topics covered were Monetary policy led by
the Governor of the Reserve Bank - Skills Development led by the Minister of Labour
- Asgi-SA led by the Economic Advisor to the Deputy
President
18Programme Performance
- Corporate Law reforms
- National Consumer Bill
- Protected disclosure
- BBBEE
- Consumer Policy
- Energy Electricity regulation Bill
- Cooperatives Bill
- Employment Equity and Skills Development
road-show programme - Superior Courts Bill resubmitted to parliament
- Modernisation of South African Technical
infrastructure - Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) Criteria
- Environmental Impact Assessment Framework
- The country position on WTO Ministerial
Conference in Hong Kong - SACU-MERCOSUR FTA Framework Agreement
19Programme Performance
- Overall Convenors, acting as a clearing house,
dealt with various issues including - Atypical form of employment and changing nature
of work - Superior Courts Bill
- Social Plan review
- Labour Market Policy Review Min Roundtable
- WTO Ministerial Conference in Hong Kong
- 5 Investible Income
- Jobs Impact monitoring mechanisms
- Proudly South African Campaign
- Section 77 Matters
- Nominations to statutory Bodies
- Nedlac Review
- Ministerial roundtable on Trade
20Programme Performance
- Two section 77 notices were filed with Nedlac
during this reporting period compared to 7
notices that were filed in the previous reporting
period. - One of the notices was dismissed as it was found
to be non-compliant. - One notice being considered by the Nedlac
Standing Committee
21Programme Performance
- Implementation of the
- Growth and Development
- Summit Agreements (GDS)
- Since the GDS does not exist in isolation, the
implementation processes are often impacted on by
various factors - locally and internationally. - The unpredictable swings in the exchange rate,
the trade environment, the commodity markets,
administered prices, etc. at times poses a huge
challenge for the GDS implementation.
- GDS remains the key flagship project for Nedlac.
- The pace of implementation has improved
remarkably since the last annual report. - Over 75 of the tasks have been implemented and
completed with about 10 still outstanding, about
10 work in progress and 5 new initiatives. - The amount of bottlenecks have been reduced
substantially since the last reporting period. - The constituencies have agreed to conduct a peer
review exercise on the GDS implementation. - Coordination of various initiatives remains a
huge challenge. - A number of Provincial and local governments have
also held their own Provincial and Local Growth
and Development - Summits.
-
22Programme Performance
- Retirement Funds Trustees Conference
- Pre-Nedlac Conference on Co-operatives
- Cooperatives Legislative Framework
- Study Tour on Cooperatives
- Implementation of Finance Sector Summit
Agreements - Municipal Infrastructure Grant Programme
- Public Investment Initiatives
- Framework for the Expanded Public Works Programme
Projects
23Programme Performance
- Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment Codes
- Technological Platform to facilitate
opportunities for BEE SMMEs - Road shows on the Employment Equity resulting in
significant improvement in reporting - National Skills Development Strategy
- Strengthening of SETAs
- Business Trust life-span Extended
- Chemical Sector Partnership Agreement and
Govt-led Customised Sector Programme for the
Chemical sector
24Countrys health check
Highlights
Country has
- Achieved macroeconomic stability
- Introduced micro-economic reform
- Started HRD Programme
- Increased social expenditure
- Growth and Development Summit agreement
- Lowest interest rates in over 20 years
- Lowest inflation rate since December 1959
- Social expenditure significantly high
- Public sector debt below 50 of GDP
- Longest period of positive GDP growth since
1940s and improved wealth per capita
Excellent Achievements within such a short space
of time
25 Trends in economic performance
Most telling weakness in growth path
investment, job creation and economic growth rate
compared to countries at the same level of
development
26IMPACT
Employment by Industry
Source Statistics SA, Labour Force Survey
27 PROMOTION OF SOCIAL DIALOGUE
- Nedlac received 20 international delegations
during this period. - The delegations included countries such as Japan,
Uganda, Lesotho, Namibia, Tanzania, Vietnam and
France. - Hosted institutions such as WTO, USAID, IMF,
NEPAD - Addressed the association of African institutions
of social dialogue in Algeria
- NEDLAC VISITS
- CONFERENCES
28Key Priority Areas for 2006/7
- Labour Market Policy review
- Code of Good Practice on Who is an Employee
- Atypical forms of Employment changing nature of
work - Superior Courts Bill
- Retirement Funds legislative reforms
- Cooperatives Bank Bill
- Social Health Insurance
- Labour Market Policy
- Work Stream
- GDS CROSS CUTTING
- Public Finance and
- Monetary Policy Work
- Stream
29Key Priority Areas for 2006/7
- Industrial Policy/Strategies
- Sector Partnership Strategies CSPs
- Trade Multilateral Bilateral
- Jobs Impact
- Fisheries Policy
- BBBEE Codes
- Education
- Transport
- Comprehensive social Security
- Health Charter
- HIV AIDS Code
- Trade and Industry Work
- Stream
- GDS CROSS CUTTING
- Development Policy Work
- Stream
30Financial statementsIncome statement
- 2005/6 2004/5 2003/4
- R R R
- Grants received 11,551,000 9,146,000 7,673,001
- Other income 330,000 300,000 264,000
- Income 11,881,000 9,446,000 7,937,001
- Operating costs (11,612,204) (8,740,830) (6,265,35
5) - Operating surplus 268,796 705,170 1,671,
- Investment income 172,454 36,481 224,748
- Finance costs
(2,623) (18,652) (3,060) - Surplus for the year 438,627 722,999 1,893,
334 - Funds transferred from(to)
234,448 132,318 (399,779)
31FINANCE
- Audit not qualified.
- Non submission of materiality and significance
framework on time, resulted in the auditors
placing emphasis of matter in their report. - It was for the first time that the auditors were
required to report on this aspect as it has not
been the subject of an audit opinion in the past
history of the Institution. - The framework has since been submitted.
32KEY CHALLENGES
- Issues are becoming more technical and more
complex, hence appropriate tooling and retooling
by all is required. - Relationships becoming somewhat adversarial if
not more robust. - Uncertainty given rise to by the current Policy
review processes. - Issues tabled with short timeframes to complete
engagement resulting in unavoidable delays. - Relationship with Parliament
- Relationship with other government departments
- Relationship with other relevant institutions
- Coordination
33 WAY FORWARD
- Engaging with the Nedlac review recommendations
- Ramping up Secretariat's capacity
- Research
- Streamlining the work programme - Identifying and
prioritizing key strategic interventions - Improving relationship with Parliament and
government departments - Build relationships with other relevant
institutions - Continue to search for improved policy
coordination - THANK YOU