/ 15 February 2011

Patel: ‘2011 is a year of job creation’

Patel: '2011 Is A Year Of Job Creation'

Job creation will be a priority throughout all spheres of government this year, Economic Development Minister Ebrahim Patel said in Parliament on Tuesday.

Addressing the national council of provinces select committee on the new growth path, he said the challenge of job creation would override all departments.

“All government departments will align their programmes with the job-creation imperative. The provincial and local spheres have been requested to do the same … with regular reporting on what they are doing to support employment creation and growth,” said Patel.

He said some of the key job drivers were infrastructure, agriculture, mining and beneficiation, manufacturing and tourism, rural development and new economies like the green economy.

He said the government would step up education and skills development, enterprise development, developmental trade policies with a strong orientation to new growth centres, and investment to support African development.

Training and funding
The government would also reform labour policies to support productivity and improve protection for vulnerable workers, and revisit broad-based black economic empowerment.

Training would be at the centre of the new growth path. Resources and funding would be drawn from state budgets, universities and science councils, retirement funds, the domestic private sector, international investment, donor funding and financial institutions.

“Each sector must contribute to building the economy,” said Patel.

He said in 2011 there would need to be better planning and improved connections between economic policy departments in provinces, municipalities and national government, and regulatory inefficiencies in economic centres must be addressed.

“2011 is a year of job creation. Coordination of policy, regulation, planning and implementation across government is critical.

“We must involve communities … social partners like business, labour and civil society have a crucial role to play,” he said. — Sapa