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Afrique du Sud


Congress of South African Trade Unions - COSATU



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Derniers articles :

COSATU statement on South Africa-India-Brazil Summit - - 17 October 2007
Victimes de l’apartheid : plainte jugée recevable à New York - - 14 octobre 2007
Jubilee South Africa Media Statement on Apartheid Lawsuits - - 14 October 2007
COSATU reaction to interests rates increase - - 11 October 2007
New GM Experiments in South Africa - - July 2007
Public Service Union Statement - - 28 June 2007
COSATU statement on ANC Conference - - 27 June 2007
Declaration of the Civil Society Jobs and Poverty Conference - 19 June 2007
COSATU statement on yesterday’s action - - 14 June 2007
Memorandum on Public Service Dispute - - 13 June 2007
COSATU CEC statement - - 7 June 2007
Statement by all public sector unions - - 1 June 2007


Voir également :


OMC - AGOA - Commerce international : WTO talks collapse
OGM : No Gateway to Africa’s Sorghum
Swaziland : Swaziland border blockade
OMC - AGOA - Commerce international : Campaign in opposition to a proposed agreement on Non-Agricultural Market Access (NAMA)
Habitat : A Joint Appeal to African Ministers on urban housing
Afrique Australe : Les San en appellent au gouvernement suisse
Travail - Emploi - Syndicalisme : Déclaration commune du Congrès du travail du Nigeria (NLC), de la Confédération des syndicats sud-africains (COSATU) et du Congrès des syndicats du Ghana (TUC)
Travail - Emploi - Syndicalisme : Joint Statement on the Trade Union Situation in Africa issued at the end of a Tree-Nation Strategy by Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), Ghana Trade Union Congress (GTUC) and the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC)


Site(s) web :

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Anti -privatisation forum :
IndyMedia-South Africa :
South African National NGO Coalition (SANGOCO) :
Women’sNet :
Earth Life Africa :
National Union of Mineworkers :
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Treatment Action Campaign :
National Labour and Economic Development Institute (NALLEDI) :
National Council of Trade Unions :
Centre for Civil Society :
http://www.ukzn.ac.za/ccs/
Khanya College - Education for Liberation :
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Zabalaza - Southern African Anarchism :
Groundwork - Environmental Justice Group :
Biowatch South Africa :
Amandla - A Plural Platform of a Thinking Left :
http://www.amandlapublishers.com/
International Labour Research and Information Group :
RENAPAS :


Dernier(s) document(s) :

Unprotected Migrants in South Africa - A report by Human Rights Watch - 28 February 2007 (PDF - 1.1 Mb)
Spend more, spend better and on the right programmes - By People’s Budget Coalition - 20 February 2007 (PDF - 639.2 kb)
Apartheid grand corruption - Assessing the scale of crimes of profit from 1976 to 1994 - A report prepared by civil society in terms of a resolution of the Second National Anti-Corruption Summit for presentation at the National Anti-Corruption Forum, May 2006 - 5 June 2006 (PDF - 317.5 kb)
People’s Budget Response to the 2005 Medium Term Budget Policy Statement - by People’s Budget Campaign (SANGOCO, COSATU, SACC) - 2 November 2005 (Word - 403 kb)
‘Nothing for Mahala’ - The forced installation of prepaid water meters in Stretford, Extension 4, Orange Farm, Johannesburg, South Africa - by The Coalition Against Water Privatisation (South Africa), the Anti-Privatisation Forum (South Africa) and Public Citizen (USA) - 15 April 2004 (PDF - 312.1 kb)
South Africa’s Official Position and Role in Promoting the World Trade Organisation - by Dot Keet,AIDC - 1 May 2002 (PDF - 787.5 kb)

People’s Budget Response on the Medium Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS)

30 October 2007
- http://www.sangoco.org.za
- http://www.cosatu.org.za/


The MTBPS continues to provide a policy direction based on an apartheid mineral based economy. There is recognition that the current growth path is at best fragile and a result of fortuitous rather than structural factors. This underlines the need for structural transformation to shift our economy from dependence on export of minerals. Continuing on the current trajectory is not sustainable especially if commodity prices can declined markedly.

Since the MTBPS provides the basic framework and the details will be in the February statement and for that reason we reserve the right to comment. At this stage, there are aspects of the MTBPS that at face value should be welcomed by all. We welcome the following aspects in the MTBPS:

a.. the stated commitment to maintain the purchasing power of social grants. However, this does not address our long standing demands to widen the coverage of social grants or indicate a meaningful orientation towards providing a comprehensive social security system.

b.. Improved expenditure on skills development and education, particularly early childhood development.

c.. Commitment to improving the quality of public services and improved pay for public servants. Still, we need to see more commitment to expand the public service in critical areas of service delivery such as health, education and policing.

We will interrogate these proposals when the details have been availed by government. We are however, concerned by the skyrocketing costs of the PBMR adjusted to R2.5 billion. This diverts resources to a high capital intensive investment with unclear energy and job creation potential and increasing health and environmental safety risks. In our view, government should spend more on renewable energy. The opportunity cost of spending money on the PMBR is forgone expenditure on education, health care, and economic infrastructure.

We are also concerned that the proposed bail out of SAA should be not be used to force retrenchments in the company. Current estimates suggest that 2000 are on the line in the airline.

Development Indicators

The minister cited the recent Community Survey which shows tremendous, albeit slow progress to provide basic services. The PBC welcomes the improvement in access to water, sanitation, and housing. Nevertheless we believe that there are serious social deficits especially in the former Bantustans that must still be addressed.

Furthermore, the costs of these basic services threaten to erode the progress registered thus far. We are painfully aware of the disconnections of water and electricity as many poor people cannot afford the bills. There is a disjuncture between national policy of free basic services and implementation at municipal level. For example, even where a household has been disconnected, the free life line service is also disconnected.

Unemployment and poverty remains a serious problem facing our society. The MTBPS does not signal major interventions to create large scale employment and reduce poverty. Many of the jobs created in the last few years are of short duration and are poorly paid. In this respect, we support the Ministers assertion that we require an effective industrial policy and a coherent poverty reduction strategy.

Macroeconomic Projections

The MTBPS introduces a new concept in managing public finances - structural budget balance. This means that government will plan for a surplus to manage the cyclical revenue or windfall gains from current growth. While on the face of it this seems like a sound policy, we question the wisdom of a budget surplus in the context of large developmental challenges.

It seems government is now moving the opposite direction but with the same intent - macroeconomic stabilisation. That entails moving from deficit to a surplus in its tools of macroeconomic management. Furthermore, we are keen to understand how the surplus will actually be spent. The PBC will have serious concern with such a policy of diverting the surplus to reduce tax burden for the rich.

Having said that, we note that the Revenue to GDP ratio is increased to 27.5% which is higher than the GEAR target of 25%. The People’s Budget Campaign (PBC) welcomes this shift and urge for further reform of our tax system to bring about more relief for the poor in the form of reduced VAT. While we welcome the commitment that cyclical revenue would be used for tax relief for the rich. Whereas the Minister has signalled that the windfall will be used for infrastructure, education, and institutional capacity building, we await the details on where exactly it will be direct to.

Issued by the People’s Budget Campaign (COSATU, SACC, SANGOCO)





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