National Treasury estimates job losses of between 690 000 and 1.79 million due to the impact of Covid-19 on the South African economy.
Van Tonder says the country has already seen the hardships caused by the initial hard lockdown and the subsequent Level 4 lockdown, including salary cuts and people queuing for basic groceries.
He points out that if companies decide to cut jobs it means they are “shrinking” their own market.
He says after the great recession the country could afford to stimulate the economy through fiscal spending, but it can no longer afford to do so because GDP is no longer growing by 5% per annum and it can hardly service its own debt as it did 12 years ago.
SA now has twice as much debt as it had then, with government’s debt repayments forming one of the largest items in the national budget.
Von Tonder says the South African Reserve Bank can’t afford to cut interest rates by as much as it used to either.
“So we can’t afford another million bulk job losses.”
He suggests that the country focus on the long-term effects of Covid-19, with government, the banking sector, small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and unions working hand in hand to prevent large scale job losses.
“In this respect is it possible to focus on the long-term effects rather than the short-term vested interests?” Van Tonder asks.
He believes salary cuts might be the best possible solution instead of retrenchments.
“Is it also possible for us to establish new companies and reduce imports because during the great recession we started importing rather than producing.”
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