No job recovery in South Africa is “scary”, according to an economist commenting on the latest Covid-19 Insights Report, which shows that the pandemic did not only affect jobs last year, but mostly this year.
The fact that 12% of respondents were unemployed last year and 17% this year is a big worry.
“Although a small sample was used, it tells us how jobs were destroyed and then not created again. In the US the unemployment number peaked in the middle of 2020 at 14.8% and now it has dropped to just 4.2% thanks to job recovery.
“Many countries have followed that trend of destruction of jobs and then job recovery, but South Africa has not seen any job recovery yet. This scares me and this data suggests that the fourth quarter employment data will probably be as bad as the third,” says economist Mike Schűssler.
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According to the latest Consulta Covid-19 Insights Report, this is what South Africans think, feel and worry about at the end of 2021: government did not do a good job with handling the pandemic and banning cigarettes and alcohol did not stop the spread of the virus.
However, a large majority believes agrees that banning large social gatherings and travel between provinces, wearing masks and curfews were in fact effective in preventing the virus from spreading according to Consulta’s latest Covid-19 Insights Report.
Schűssler says it is worrying that the respondents believe the virus could be stopped by travel when the world shut down but the virus still travelled. “That is very disappointing to me, as we now want foreigners to come back. Even if they are just talking about local travel, it still makes no sense.
“Big gatherings, yes, but travel restrictions hurt hotels, Űber, car rentals, airlines, airport shops, tour guides, guest houses, ships, food and event companies and kept family members apart.”
Consulta released its first Covid-19 Insights report in April 2020 and conducted another survey among 1 000 people between 24 July 2021 and 15 August 2021 to find out how South Africans are coping in their work and home lives, what their views are on government’s handling of the Covid-19 lockdown and if their employment and financial conditions have changed.
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Schűssler says it is interesting that the country is split near 50% to 48% on the disaster lockdown and regulation brought in by the government according to the survey.
“However, this is mainly researchers of whom many (43% at one stage) got to work from home and that may create a bit of a lockdown bias in my view. It is good to see most of the respondents believe that stopping alcohol and cigarette sales and closing restaurants were silly, as this is where taxes and jobs were primarily lost.”
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“The overall sentiment continues to be one of tackling the changes, adjusting to the new conditions as a new normal and ‘just getting on with it’.
“There is also a marked decrease in interest in news sources about the pandemic from when the pandemic first arrived in SA, suggesting that people no longer care for the information or news in many ways,” says Marko Fourie, product lead for SA-csi at Consulta.
He warns that we need to guard against complacency setting in.
“It seems that the pandemic has been overtaken by other pressing factors amplified by the economic and social fallout of the pandemic.”
This includes growing disparities in the country’s socioeconomics, the disproportionate negative impact on vulnerable communities, local government elections and political upheaval and an overwhelming sense of pandemic fatigue.
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