While the City of Cape Town retained bragging rights for having the lowest unemployment rate of any metro in the country, there is still much to be done to address the issue in the city as thousands in the workforce remain without a job.
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Yesterday, Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said the City was encouraged by unemployment in Cape Town declining by four percentage points year-on-year. However, much work still lies ahead to ensure more economic growth that helps more people out of poverty and into work over time.
The latest Stats SA Quarterly Work Force Survey (QLFS) for January to March 2023 shows Cape Town’s unemployment rate is at 26% based on the expanded unemployment definition, which offers the most complete estimate.
This is 0.9 percentage points lower than the previous quarter and four percentage points lower compared to Q1 2022. This is the fourth consecutive quarter of positive employment growth for Cape Town.
In the first three months of 2023, 40 000 more Capetonians went to work, taking the city’s labour force to 1,7 million people. This takes employment levels beyond the pre-Covid mark and is the highest recording of employment in Cape Town to date since the implementation of the QLFS report in 2008.
‘Our mission is to position Cape Town as a beacon of hope to show what is possible in South Africa,’ Hill-Lewis said. ‘Decline is not inevitable, it can be halted and turned around.’
‘While too many people remain without jobs, we are encouraged by the drop in unemployment despite the record levels of loadshedding impacting our economy.’
He added that Cape Town is making big investments now to sustain the city’s economic momentum, including a R2,3bn end loadshedding plan that will offer protection from the first four stages of Eskom’s blackouts within three years.
‘Our city will further invest R43bn in vital basic services infrastructure to drive economic growth and job creation over the next three years, more than Joburg and Durban combined. This investment alone will create an estimated 135 000 jobs in our city over three years,’ he said, adding that Cape Town aims to be the easiest place to do business in Africa.
A recently launched Ease of Doing Business Index will focus on reducing the costs, time and red tape associated with ten critical indicators for businesses, including building plan approvals, basic service installations, and business licencing.
The City’s mayoral committee member for economic growth, James Vos, said his team works closely with critical job-creating industries to help Capetonians access skills and job opportunities.
‘From call centres to craft and design, technology and green energy, boat building and tourism, to clothing manufacturing and property development, we work closely with these business partners to build their skilled workforces and secure investments from domestic and global corporations’ Vos explained. ‘For example, the Investment Facilitation Branch has secured new investments into Cape Town worth over R34bn and thousands of jobs since its establishment in 2017.’
‘Through our small business support measures, we have also helped entrepreneurs across the city to access the resources they need to survive and thrive. Cape Town is building towards our vision of being a City of hope for all in a country that is facing harsh economic realities.’
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Cape Town boasts lowest metro unemployment rate, drops by 2.6%
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