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MBSA CALLS ON GOVERNMENT TO SAVE CONSTRUCTION SECTOR

27 March 2019

Master Builders South Africa (MBSA)
has called for urgent government intervention to prevent the total collapse of
the country’s construction industry following Group Five’s filing for business
rescue this month – the fifth major construction company to do so in less than
a year.

Roy Mnisi,
executive director of MBSA, expressed deep concern on the matter: “This is the
fifth large firm to succumb in less than a year. In 2018 alone, NMC
Construction went into voluntary liquidation while Basil Read, Esor
Construction and Liviero Group applied for business rescue. We still have many
other small-medium sized firms facing financial difficulties and yet there has
not been any government-industry engagement to develop a plan to halt the
trend.”

According to Mnisi, the industry has continually engaged government on the
adverse impact of late/non-payment of contractors for work completed but the
matter remains unresolved. “The decline has reached a very concerning level, so
much so that it is no longer a sectoral problem but a national crisis. We
appeal to the government to open up to the industry and urgently find
concomitant solutions to save it from a total collapse.”

He, however, acknowledged that there were other factors instrumental to the
demise of the industry. These include a sluggish economy, reduction in ‘actual’
infrastructure spending by the government, as well as illegal and often violent
work-stoppages at construction sites by various illegal forums.

The adverse impact of these company closures was severe, he noted. “The
short-term effect is that direct employees of these collapsed companies lose
their jobs. When you consider that the construction industry employs more than
11% of the workforce in South Africa, the negative impact on the economy, as a
whole, is dire. There is also a knock-on effect across the industry because
subcontractors, suppliers and service providers are equally affected.”

“In the long-term, we will lose our capacity to develop infrastructure and will have to depend on foreign companies in the future. That is why we are appealing to the government for engagement,” Mnisi concluded. https://www.bizcommunity.com/Article/196/494/188805.html#more

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