This Article is From Jul 01, 2014

Massive Strike Threatens to Cripple South Africa Engineering Firms

Johannesburg: Nearly a quarter of a million members of South Africa's largest union downed tools on Tuesday, beginning an indefinite strike that threatens to bring the engineering sector to a halt.

Members of the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa marched in cities across the country, demanding a minimum 10 percent pay increase and a better housing allowance that the industry says is unaffordable.

The strike is expected to hit more than 10,000 metals and engineering firms that account for about four percent of South African economic output, according to a Citigroup economist.

Among the companies believed to be affected are multinationals BAE Systems and Bell Equipment.

Last-minute talks on Monday night between the union and industry leaders brokered by Labour Minister Mildred Oliphant failed to break the deadlock.

The strike comes as another blow to South Africa's beleaguered economy, which contracted in the first quarter after a five-month platinum strike.

Some fear another strike could push Africa's most industrialised nation towards a further recession that would increase widespread social unrest and already crippling unemployment.

The country's credit rating was recently downgraded by Standard and Poor's to one notch above junk status.

"Our economy has been seriously under-performing over the past few years and the situation has been worsening in recent times. The last thing that we need is a strike," said Kaizer Nyatsumba, CEO of the Steel and Engineering Industries Federation of Southern Africa, an industry umbrella group.
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