EDITORIAL: The coming public sector pay war

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EDITORIAL: The coming public sector pay war
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The government needs to stick to its guns in refusing to entertain higher-than-inflation demands.

would require an extra R146bn over the next few years, cannibalising funds needed for service delivery.

Just 27 of 257 municipalities received clean audits last year. And, as former public service & administration minister Senzo Mchunu once admitted, one in three senior managers in the public service aren’t qualified for the positions they hold. Private sector companies are facing similar unrealistic demands, under bizarre pressure from cabinet ministers who should know better.

After CEO Neal Froneman said Sibanye had enough cash to withstand the strike for years, Mantashe said his officials should look at revoking the licence “for a mine that doesn’t want to mine but sits on the properties, so that we can give that property to companies that want to mine gold”.

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