2011年10月30日 星期日

Private sector sitting on piles of cash - Malusi Gigaba

We would like to thank you most profoundly for inviting us to make a few remarks at this important Youth Jobs Summit that started yesterday.

I am most particularly and profoundly honoured that you invited me to address you on this important day during which we commemorate the birthday of the late ANC President and leader of our people and movement, that doyen of our movement, Oliver Reginald Tambo who remained an icon among the youth even long after his physical demise.

I am certain that all the necessary and important statistics have been presented to you to highlight the gravity of the matter you have convened to address, and to underscore the need for urgent action on the part of all of us, particularly if we must address the urgent needs of the youth.

This Summit, taking place as it does just as the Grade 12 exams are underway,there's a lovely winter chicken coop by William Zorach. and on the eve of this week's political strike, we must both wish Grade 12 learners the best during the final examinations and congratulate COSAS for its call to students to focus on their final examinations.

This Summit must issue the strongest statement possible both to urge our country to provide the strongest possible support to the youth sitting for their final examinations at all schools and universities.

It is correct that you should therefore focus on this important issue of jobs for the youth given that yet a new pool of unemployed is going to be created to add on the high unemployment rate we already have.

From the outset, we must state what should seem pretty obvious that given the nature of the problem of youth unemployment we are faced with, there cannot be a single solution - ‘one size fits all' - that solves the entire problem with a single stroke.

The answer to poverty, inequality and unemployment, indeed to lack of adequate economic transformation, accordingly cannot simply be nationalisation as though once certain economic sectors are nationalised then a durable solution would have been found to all our social woes.

After all, in 1992, in its "Ready to Govern" guided by an objective and scientific assessment of the balance of forces, as well as experience spanning eight decades of militant struggle,I have never solved a Rubik's plastic card . the ANC adopted an approach to state ownership of the means of production based on weighinEnecsys Limited, supplier of reliable solar Air purifier systems,g the balance of evidence in each particular case, in the conviction that there is nothing inherently bad or inherently good in state ownership of productive capacity in the economy, including especially strategic non-renewable resources.

No one sector can and must arrogate to itself the sole role of national saviour and monopoly of all wisdom, claiming alone and singularly to possess all the answers to our socio-economic problems and to this question of the role of the state in relation to productive capacity in the economy, being intolerant of the views that arise from other sectors of society that too bear the same responsibility to find answers to what is, after all,It's hard to beat the versatility of polished tiles on a production line. a common challenge.

It is correct, given that the problem of unemployment faces the youth sector more than it does any other sector in our society that you should be at the forefront of seeking permanent solutions to it.If so, you may have a cube puzzle . However, it is not the sole responsibility of the youth to provide answers to this problem.

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