Skip to main content

Massive strike in South Africa’s banking sector is moving ahead

| Supplier news

South Africa’s biggest financial union Sasbo says it will move ahead with its plans to institute a major banking strike on Friday (27 September).

The union – which currently has over 73,000 members – will receive additional support South Africa’s largest trade federation Cosatu as employees down tools over planned retrenchments in the banking sector.

Speaking to BusinessTech, the union’s general secretary Joe Kokela said that he expected between 30,000 to 40,000 members across the financial industry to be involved in the strike action on the day.

This will include protests across the country’s major metropoles, including some 15,000 to 20,000 protesters in Gauteng alone.

However, Kokela noted that the country’s banks were not taking the strike action lying down, and that the union had received an interdict to stop the industrial action.

“We have been speaking to the banks. They based their planned retrenchments in terms of S189 of the Labour relations act, arguing that employees were additional to operational requirements.

“However, this was not proper and they were hiding under this section as an excuse to retrench.”

Kokela added that the union would not be deterred by the planned interdict.

“In Zulu they have a word for this – ‘Asijdi’ – meaning there is no turning back now,” he said.

Retrenchments

A number of local banks have closed a number of their branches throughout the country as a result of digitalisation, which encourages self-service, with clients using their cell phones and computers, rather than walking into a branch.

Lenders are cutting jobs as they seek ways to lower costs and contend with slow economic growth and fresh competition in the industry from branchless, digital entrants such as TymeBank and insurer Discovery.

Job cuts in the country are particularly sensitive as the unemployment rate has risen to 29%, the highest in more than a decade.

Absa, Standard Bank, and Nedbank Group have all consulted with staff about cuts in recent months.

Absa is restructuring operations across its business units, Standard Bank is closing 91 branches, while Nedbank is in talks with about 1,500 employees over job cuts or redeployments, Bloomberg reported in July.


Related Articles

Festive family fashion alert - Pick n Pay unvei...

Forget fugly clichéd holiday-themed jerseys: matching family pyjamas is the latest craze for the holidays and is flying off the shelves, says Pick n Pay Clothing.

Liberty Accelerates Unclaimed Benefits Pay Outs 

As part of its ongoing Unclaimed Benefits Funds tracing efforts, this year, Liberty has identified in excess of 13 000 people and paid over R105 million to members and beneficiaries who had a legitimate claim.

Shoprite and Checkers support small suppliers t...

Shoprite and Checkers are helping small suppliers grow their volumes this Black Friday as customers flock to its stores looking for value on everyday essentials and groceries between Thursday, 23 November and Sunday, 26 November 2023. 

Supermarket chain set to appeal judgment in ‘si...

By: Chevon Booysen - IOL Retail giant Pick n Pay has indicated its intention to appeal a Western Cape High Court judgment to damage all print works, all printed materials, product packaging, and the like bearing the infringing get-ups similar to ...

Woolies pulls Israeli couscous after 'credible'...

By: Ahmed Areff – Fin24 Woolworths has pulled Israeli-imported pearl couscous from its shelves, but has emphasised that the move was preemptive due to threats it received and not because it supported a boycott of the country’s products or was pro...