Skip to main content

Seasonal hiring provides a boost - Quarterly Labour Force Survey

| Economic factors

Employment figures for 4Q15 released in the quarterly labour force survey (QLFS) show that the unemployment rate fell from 25.5% in the third quarter to 24.5%.

While encouraging at a headline level, much of the good news is attributed to seasonal hiring, and the unemployment rate rose by 0.2% on a year-on-year basis.

On a quarterly basis, 107,000 jobs were created in the financial and business services sector, 75,000 in the retail sector and 55,000 in the community, personal and social services sector. Job creation in the retail and financial/business services sector can largely be attributed to seasonal (holiday period) fluctuations, while the community, social and personal services is typically considered a proxy for public sector hiring. In the context of yesterday’s budget commitments to cap headcount growth in the public sector, we expect little impetus in job creation from the state which has in the past held up the overall employment rate.

The budget speech also outlined the funding constraints for large infrastructure projects which would have provided some much needed employment momentum in the mining, manufacturing and construction sectors. Manufacturing actually lost jobs in the fourth quarter on both a quarterly and annual basis while capital equipment investment from the industry remains robust. This suggests an element of labour substitution. The agriculture sector also has the potential to shed further jobs in the coming quarters given the prevailing drought conditions.

Overall, we expect unemployment levels to trend sideways to slightly higher as both the public and private sectors adjust to significantly more austere fiscal conditions.

Pin It

Related Articles

By: Tawanda Karombo – IOL Business In a year marked by stiff economic challenges, Shoprite has announced significant increases in the remuneration of its top executives, while simultaneously warning about the growing price sensitivity among South...
By: Manyane Manyane - IOL Retailers have been criticised for keeping essential food items prices high despite production costs continuing to decline.
The Department of Mineral and Petroleum Resources is in talks with National Treasury to lower the cost of fuel, with a move to change to both petrol and diesel prices in South Africa.
By: Nick Wilson – Fin24 Releasing its latest Essential Food Price Monitoring Report (EFPM) on Friday, the Competition Commission said the "slow transmission" of reduced cooking oil prices to consumers, for instance, raised concerns about retailer...
By: Siphelele Dludla – IOL Business Report Sentiment in the retail industry in South Africa has ticked up though it remains in contractionary territory as consumers have begun feeling confident that the cost of living is slightly easing.