S Africa's municipal workers start wage strike
JOHANNESBURG - At least 145,000 South African municipal workers will walk off the job on Monday in a strike aimed at shutting down services including garbage collection, in the latest dispute to disrupt Africa's biggest economy.
The stoppage will extend South Africa's "strike season", which has already hit the mining and fuel sectors, threatening to curb growth and damage a stagnant economy.
Employers have offered a 6.08 percent wage increase. The union's 18 percent demand, nearly four times inflation, is meant to make up for spiralling costs of food and fuel, the labour group has said.
Previous SAMWU strikes have led to garbage piling up in city streets and slower repairs of broken water pipes.
The South African Local Government Association (SALGA) said the union's demands were unreasonable.
"If this demand is to be met, the impact thereof will have to be passed on to local communities," it said in a newspaper advert on Sunday.
Recent weeks have seen South Africa's annual mid-year wage bargaining session. Coal, gold and diamond miners and petroleum sector workers have returned to work after strikes.
There are outstanding disputes at the world's top two platinum producers, Anglo American Platinum and Impala Platinum (Implats) . Talks are set to resume this week.
The National Union of Mineworkers said on Saturday Implats had improved its pay rise offer to between 8 and 10 percent, but the labour group was still holding out for a double-digit increase for all its members at the company.
The union will consult its members on the revised offer before taking a decision, it said.
The union will also meet on Tuesday to decide on a 7 percent pay rise offer from state-owned power utility Eskom . The NUM and two other unions in the dispute have been asking for a 13 percent increase.
Eskom supplies nearly all of South Africa's power, but a strike at the utility is still a long way off as unions need to go through stringent procedures before workers can walk off the job and Eskom may use the courts, seeking an injunction to prevent a work stoppage.
Any significant pay rises would affect the utility's strained balance sheet and could lead to further steep rises in electricity tariffs.
Economists warn wage settlements well above the current 5 percent inflation rate will drive up the cost of a labour force which is more expensive than those in rival emerging economies.
Employers have responded to increasing wage bills by shedding jobs in a labour market already suffering from 25 percent unemployment.
The ruling African National Congress, in a governing alliance with labour, does not want to antagonise a group that has supplied it with millions of votes.