https://www.polity.org.za
Deepening Democracy through Access to Information
Home / Statements RSS ← Back
South Africa|Construction|Job Creation|Unemployment|ActionSA|Stats SA|Alan Beesley|Cyril Ramaphosa
|||
south-africa|construction|job-creation|unemployment|actionsa|stats-sa|alan-beesley|cyril-ramaphosa
Close

Email this article

separate emails by commas, maximum limit of 4 addresses

Sponsored by

Close

Article Enquiry

ActionSA calls for axing of Ministers following South Africa’s escalating jobs crisis


Close

ActionSA calls for axing of Ministers following South Africa’s escalating jobs crisis

Should you have feedback on this article, please complete the fields below.

Please indicate if your feedback is in the form of a letter to the editor that you wish to have published. If so, please be aware that we require that you keep your feedback to below 300 words and we will consider its publication online or in Creamer Media’s print publications, at Creamer Media’s discretion.

We also welcome factual corrections and tip-offs and will protect the identity of our sources, please indicate if this is your wish in your feedback below.


Close

Embed Video

ActionSA calls for axing of Ministers following South Africa’s escalating jobs crisis

ActionSA calls for axing of Ministers following South Africa’s escalating jobs crisis
Photo by Reuters

12th May 2026

ARTICLE ENQUIRY      SAVE THIS ARTICLE      EMAIL THIS ARTICLE

Font size: -+

The content on this page is not written by Polity.org.za, but is supplied by third parties. This content does not constitute news reporting by Polity.org.za.

ActionSA is calling on President Cyril Ramaphosa to fire all the GNU Ministers responsible for South Africa’s current job-destroying environment, following today’s devastating unemployment statistics released by Statistics South Africa.

The Quarterly Labour Force Survey for the first quarter of 2026 paints a bleak picture of a government that continues to fail millions of South Africans desperate for work. The tragedy is compounded by the fact that the very Ministers tasked with enabling job creation are instead overseeing the destruction of hundreds of thousands of jobs South Africans already had.

Advertisement

South Africa lost 345,000 jobs in just three months. This means 30,000 jobs lost each week and 6,000 each workday. The official unemployment rate climbed from 31.4% to 32.7%, while the expanded unemployment rate — which includes discouraged work-seekers — rose to an alarming 43.7%.

Even more concerning is that discouraged work-seekers increased by 178,000 in a single quarter, bringing the total number of South Africans who have effectively lost hope of finding employment to just below 4 million people.

Advertisement

The formal sector shed 189,000 jobs, while the informal sector — often the last refuge for struggling South Africans — lost a further 127,000 jobs.

The heaviest employment losses were recorded in community and social services, which lost 206,000 jobs, followed by construction, which lost 110,000 jobs.

Today, fewer than four in ten working-age South Africans are employed, with the absorption rate now sitting at just 39.7%.

The lived reality behind these statistics is devastating.

Nearly 12 million South Africans are unemployed or have given up looking for work entirely. Millions of households remain trapped in poverty, unable to provide for their families or build a better future.

Just days after government commemorated Workers’ Day, millions of South Africans remain excluded from the dignity of work, the dignity of earning an income, and the dignity of being able to put food on the table.

Particularly alarming is the fact that 37.6% of South Africans between the ages of 15 and 24 are not in employment, education or training.

These figures are not the result of bad luck. They are the direct consequence of policy failure, economic stagnation, collapsing investor confidence, infrastructure failure, and a government that has failed to place economic growth and job creation at the centre of national policy.

Two years into the Government of National Unity, South Africans are yet to see a coherent economic reform agenda capable of meaningfully addressing the unemployment crisis.

ActionSA will therefore formally write to President Ramaphosa, urging him to take urgent and decisive action against those Ministers entrusted with enabling economic growth, investment and employment, but who continue to preside over economic decline and rising joblessness.

South Africans cannot continue paying the price for government failure while unemployment deepens quarter after quarter.

 

Issued by ActionSA Member of Parliament Alan Beesley 

EMAIL THIS ARTICLE      SAVE THIS ARTICLE      ARTICLE ENQUIRY      FEEDBACK

To subscribe email subscriptions@creamermedia.co.za or click here
To advertise email advertising@creamermedia.co.za or click here


About

Polity.org.za is a product of Creamer Media.
www.creamermedia.co.za

Other Creamer Media Products include:
Engineering News
Mining Weekly
Research Channel Africa

Read more

Subscriptions

We offer a variety of subscriptions to our Magazine, Website, PDF Reports and our photo library.

Subscriptions are available via the Creamer Media Store.

View store

Advertise

Advertising on Polity.org.za is an effective way to build and consolidate a company's profile among clients and prospective clients. Email advertising@creamermedia.co.za

View options

Email Registration Success

Thank you, you have successfully subscribed to one or more of Creamer Media’s email newsletters. You should start receiving the email newsletters in due course.

Our email newsletters may land in your junk or spam folder. To prevent this, kindly add newsletters@creamermedia.co.za to your address book or safe sender list. If you experience any issues with the receipt of our email newsletters, please email subscriptions@creamermedia.co.za