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The body of a patient is removed from the accident and emergency ward at Dr George Mukhari Academic Hospital in Ga-Rankuwa, Tshwane. Picture: James Oatway/Bhekisisa
The body of a patient is removed from the accident and emergency ward at Dr George Mukhari Academic Hospital in Ga-Rankuwa, Tshwane. Picture: James Oatway/Bhekisisa

If unions accept the government’s latest pay deal, nurses, cleaners and porters at state hospitals will have less money to take home than last year — as was the case for the 2022 and 2020 financial years, according to our analysis of data from the department of public service & administration

In the state’s final offer these workers will get a 3.3% increase compared with what their salaries were in the 2022/2023 financial year (which ends on March 31), says Oomang Parag, spokesperson for the Public Service Co-ordinating Bargaining Council. 

Inflation was 7% in February, according to Stats SA. 

Public servants have also been getting a R1,000 cash allowance (after tax) from the government since 2021. Until now, this cash payment wasn’t added to the figure that the state uses when it calculates how much to pay into people’s pension funds (which is usually 13% of someone’s “pensionable” salary, on top of the 7.5% that workers contribute each month themselves). 

But the new deal says that from April 1, this amount will be part of the maths, which will translate into a bigger pension contribution from the state. It will also create a higher starting point for future negotiations, says the public service & administration department. 

On average, the cash payout represents 4.2% of public servants’ salaries. Since that’s now being added to the 3.3% increase to their baseline salary, the government says workers are getting a pay increase of 7.5% in total. 

Is this what the “death strike” was about? 

The negotiations about the pay in the next financial year (April 1 2023 to March 31 2024) are unfolding against a tense backdrop. 

In March, members of the National Education, Health & Allied Workers’ Union (Nehawu) led a strike over the salaries for the current financial year, which ends on March 31. They wanted a 10% salary hike for 2022/2023, but the government offered just 3%.

The strike cost four people their lives, according to the government, but the chaos didn’t result in a salary bump. Strikers’ pay will also be docked for every day they weren’t at work between March 6 and March 17 under a “no work, no pay” agreement between the government and unions. 

In the end, even the promise that ended the strike (that the state would keep talking to Nehawu about its demands) fell through, according to the union’s spokesperson Lwazi Nkolonzi. 

He says: “The government has reneged on the settlement agreement of the strike about 2022/2023 pay.”

Why was the state hesitant to agree to salary hikes?

South Africa just can’t afford the pay unions want. 

The government is working to rein in its massive public sector wage bill. 

In relation to the size of its economy, South Africa spends more on paying public sector workers than most other countries. In 2021, the combined cost of government worker salaries was equal to 14.8% of the value of all the goods and services that were produced in the country in that year (GDP). 

Other middle-income countries such as Mexico, India and Russia had a public sector wage bill of less than 10% of GDP.

So what do nurses, porters and cleaners earn at South Africa’s state hospitals? We look at the government’s salary data to see how their pay has changed over the years. 

The government stuck to the agreement for the first two years, but backtracked in the third year. This infuriated unions, including Nehawu

Nurses earn between R18,300 and R93,100 a month — plus a R1,000 stipend

Among full-time professional nurses working at government hospitals, those doing their year of community service are paid the least

Professional nurses study for four years and then have to do a year’s compulsory community service after graduating. There are also three other categories of nurses that work at government hospitals and clinics: specialist nurses, staff nurses and nursing assistants. Specialist nurses are professional nurses who have a postgraduate degree in a particular speciality, such as cancer treatment or psychiatric care. Staff nurses and nursing assistants work under the supervision of a professional nurse. 

Staff nurses are qualified to do more complicated tasks than nursing assistants. They can treat fractures, for instance, something nursing assistants aren’t allowed to do. 

At the moment, the government pays professional nurses doing community service R220,347 a year (which works out to R18,362.25 a month), according to data from the department of public service & administration, and nursing managers at tertiary hospitals, the best-paid position, R1,117,236 a year (R93,103 a month). 

According to Moses Mushi, spokesperson for the department of public service & administration, this figure includes benefits like medical aid and housing, so the basic salary they take home is less than this. 

However, all workers also get a stipend of R1,000 per month (after tax), which is not included in the annual salary figures, Mushi says. 

Salary ranges for staff nurses and nursing assistants are lower. A staff nurse, who studies towards a two-year diploma, will get between R179,172 and R311,361 a year from the government, while a nursing assistant, who has a one-year qualification, will get between R138,549 and R240,777. Once again, these workers also get the R1,000 monthly allowance.

Though there is a wide gulf between the salaries of different categories of nurses, what’s common to them is that when accounting for inflation, these workers will have earned less than the previous year for two out of the last three financial years. That will become three out of four if unions accept the government’s current offer. 

The broken promise that’s vexing nurses 

In 2018, the National Treasury announced a three-year wage agreement for a large group of civil servants that included nurses, state lawyers and engineers. 

The government stuck to the agreement for the first two years, but backtracked in the third year. This infuriated unions, including Nehawu, who accused the state of lying to them. 

The deal said that from April 2018, top-earning public service workers would get a 6% wage increase, while the lowest earners would receive 7%. This was above expected inflation of 5.5% and well above what inflation actually ended up being (standing at 4.5% that month).

For the next two years (2019 and 2020), more senior workers (such as middle managers) would receive an annual salary increase in line with inflation, while less senior staff (such as nurses who aren’t in managerial positions) were to get 1% above inflation, treasury’s statement said. 

Wages increased by the promised amounts in 2018, the first year of the agreement. For instance, community service nurses had a pre-tax annual income of R185,478 in 2017, which jumped by 7% to R198,462 in 2018.

Things continued smoothly in 2019. For example, community service nurses saw their annual salaries climb by 6.2% to R210,768 (other lower-paid nurses saw their salaries increase by the same percentage). 

The cost of products and services had increased by 4.4% at that time compared with the previous year (consumer price inflation). It had been expected to increase by 5.3%.

That means the wage increase for this group was 1.8 percentage points higher than actual inflation for April. 

But things took a sour turn in 2020, the final year of the agreement. 

In the midst of the financially crippling pandemic, the government was unable to stick to its promises, and failed to raise wages at all (the government did say that workers would receive increased medical and housing allowances, though the government’s salary data doesn’t show this). This is despite the fact that inflation was 3%

For some nurses, their salaries continued to buy them less every year. 

In July 2021, they got a 1.5% wage hike, as well as a monthly stipend (that isn’t subject to pension deductions) of between R1,220 and R1,695, depending on their salary level. According to Mushi, the stipend equals R1,000 a month after tax for everyone. 

Since community service nurses earned R210,768 a year in 2020, and received a monthly stipend of R1,220, the stipend represented a roughly 7% increase. Combined with the baseline increase, they received a 8.5% wage hike overall. This was far more than inflation at the time, which stood at 4.6%.   

By contrast, higher-paid nurses such as nursing managers at tertiary hospitals got less than inflation for that year. 

They would have been earning at least R949,482 a year in 2020 and would have received a monthly allowance of R1,450 for 2021, meaning their stipend represented a 1.8% increase. Together with the pensionable 1.5% raise, they got a 3.3% wage hike — lower than inflation. 

In October 2022, things changed again as the government increased the pensionable wages by 3%, below the rate at which consumer prices had increased (7.6%). The state also extended the stipend (which was initially only planned for 2020/2021), which remained at R1,000 after tax.

Porters and cleaners have had a rough couple of years — but 2021 was great  

Government-employed porters and cleaners have had a similar experience as nurses. 

Job adverts for hospital porters and cleaners (who are employed across government-run offices) usually class these positions as “salary level 2” roles in the category of “non-occupation specific dispensation (OSD) workers”. 

The OSD was set up to keep skilled professionals in the government service by making sure they get salary increases that align with their specific field of expertise and experience. This system is supposed to make sure people can plot a career path working for the state, and to ensure they can earn well even if they don’t go into management.  

Non-OSD workers, such as porters and cleaners, qualify for annual increases to keep up with inflation and bonuses, but they have to work for a set amount of time (at least 12 years) before they can be promoted to the next salary bracket. 

How much can people on level 2 non-OSD salaries earn? 

Department of public service & administration data shows that salaries at this level range between R107,196 and R126,270 before any tax is paid (supervisors and foremen are on a higher salary grade and so earn more). On top of this, they also get the R1,000 a month post-tax stipend.

Job adverts usually offer the minimum amount. 

For instance, there is currently a vacancy for a porter at the Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital in Cape Town, which is being advertised at R107,196 per year pre-tax. 

Someone at the lowest pay level in this position would therefore get R8,933 a month plus the R1,000 cash payment from the government, with their salary also including benefits such as a pension contribution, medical aid and a housing allowance. 

Over the past three years, job adverts show that porters and cleaners have experienced similar wage changes to nurses — they didn’t get a salary increase in 2020. (For instance, job announcements published by the government show that porters were earning the same amount in the 2020/2021 financial year as in 2019/2020 — namely, R102,534 per year before tax.)

But in 2021, they got a 1.5% increase, along with the additional non-pensionable allowance. Since their wages stood at R102,534 a year for 2020, a stipend of R1,220 a month increased their salaries by 14.3%. Combined with the baseline increase, they thus got a 15.8% increase overall. 

Like other public sector workers, they then got a 3% increase in their pensionable wage in 2022, along with the continuation of the stipend.

In the 2021/2022 financial year, adverts showed their pensionable salaries bumped up to R104,073 (a 1.5% increase), though they would also have received an additional R1,220 stipend at this point. In the following year it went up by 3% to R107,196.

In short, just like nurses, people doing these jobs also saw cuts in their wage for two out of the past three years. 

This story was produced by the Bhekisisa Centre for Health Journalism. Sign up for the newsletter.

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