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The Weekly Update EP:06 Chris Hattingh Breaks Down NHI, The New Bills & Laws Being Passed

The Weekly Update EP:06 Chris Hattingh Breaks Down NHI, The New Bills & Laws Being Passed

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    Massmart: Saccawu taking a softer line

    Business Day reports that the South African Commercial, Catering and Allied Workers Union (Saccawu), which is opposing the R16,5bn merger of US giant Walmart with SA's Massmart, appears to be taking a softer line in the final day of the Massmart hearing in the Competition Appeal Court, suggesting that strenuous conditions be set if the merger went ahead.
    Massmart: Saccawu taking a softer line

    Initially, Saccawu demanded that Massmart's R100m supplier fund be increased to R500m, but later conceded the figure was not based on anything substantial.

    Paul Kennedy, representing the union, said although prices and consumer welfare were not irrelevant, one needed to assess the whole spectrum, from consumers to retailers and producers. "We need to go beyond the price benefit issue, " he said. "Unemployment is one of the most critical challenges this developmental state is facing. Procurement has crucial significance in this matter and should have enjoyed more attention at the (Competition) Tribunal."

    Judge Dennis Davis said it was not the duty of the competition authorities to protect certain parts of the economy. "We cannot protect you from the gale-force blast of globalisation," he said. "The real issue here is how do we get SA's manufacturing set to deliver more efficiently? Protectionism doesn't work." Judge Davis also raised concern about unions' demands to impose a closed-shop agency agreement and centralised group bargaining at Massmart, saying the union could seek redress through the Labour Relations Act.

    Read the full article on www.businessday.co.za.

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