Johannesburg, 18 September 2024 – Making the re-industrialization of South Africa a reality was a key focus at the Metals & Engineering Industries Ministerial Conference and Banquet Dinner on 17 September 2024.
Lucio Trentini, CEO of the Steel and Engineering Industries Federation of Southern Africa, which organized the event, said the Metals & Engineering Sector was ready to roll up its sleeves and, in partnership with the government, help to build an inclusive economy that creates jobs and eradicates poverty.
“We, business and government, are all in this together. We share a vested interest.” Trentini said. This sentiment was echoed in SEIFSA Federation President Elias Monage’s introduction. “The time to act is now.” Monage stressed “that the re-industrialization project requires a clear industrial policy framework that will unlock the value inherent in the metals and engineering sector”.
During question-and-answer sessions with attendees, the issue of implementation was raised frequently, with government and industry leaders insistent that action was necessary to turn policy into reality.
The view that South Africa’s Seventh Administration in the form of the Government of National Unity (GNU) had brought a degree of stability to the country was repeated by panelists and members of the audience throughout the conference.
In his speech, Deputy Minister of Finance David Masondo said this political outcome which implied stability had already benefited the rand whose continued strength “is a critical requirement for low inflation, which is one of the anchors of the country’s fiscal stance”. Lower inflation results in lower interest rates which would ease the debt service burden on the fiscal purse and allow room for this money to be diverted to other productive uses in the economy.
The GNU was well represented by Minister of Transport Barbara Creecy, Minister of Employment and Labour Nomakhosazana Meth, Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure Dean Macpherson, Deputy Minister of Finance David Masondo, Deputy Minister of Electricity and Energy Samantha Graham-Mare and Deputy Minister of Water and Sanitation David Mahlobo, who all provided insightful analysis at the Conference. Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition Parks Tau was the keynote speaker at the Banquet Dinner and was clear that the government was a willing and committed partner for industry in the drive to build South Africa. Tau stressed that the current economic challenges are not just roadblocks, they are invitations forthe private sector to come to the party in new and meaningful ways. He stressed that government will do its part by creating an enabling environment, an environment where red tape is converted to smart tape and regulation is predictable wherein business can thrive. He stressed that “the most successful economies are those built on partnerships”.
Monage, in his closing speech, said the conference’s immediate objectives had been achieved, “government has accepted the need to engage with industry and has committed to a process that will lead to agreed policy recommendations, the formation of strategic partnerships and, importantly, a commitment to action”.
In his closing of the Banquet Dinner, Trentini said the Steel and Engineering Sector was ready to work collaboratively with government on creating a prosperous South Africa for all South Africans, and quoted Nelson Mandela: “Action without vision is only passing time, vision without action is merely day dreaming, but vision with action can change the world.”
SEIFSA is a national federation representing 16 independent employer associations in the metal and engineering industries, with a combined membership of over 1 300 companies employing over 170 000 employees. The federation was formed in 1943 and its member companies range from giant steel-making corporations to micro-enterprises employing fewer than 50 people.