Poging GOUD - Vrij
How South Africa can turn Trump's 30% blow into a global jobs advantage
Cape Times
|July 11, 2025
EARLIER this week, US President Donald Trump announced a sweeping 30% tariff on all goods imported from South Africa, citing "unfair trade practices" and a lack of reciprocity. While the decision has rattled exporters and drawn sharp criticism from Pretoria, it may well be the catalyst we need to rethink our economic destiny.
Rather than respond with indignation or fear, South Africa should view this challenge as an opportunity: to accelerate innovation, create new export markets, and, above all, build jobs for our youth - both at home and abroad.
We've faced shocks before. From sanctions during apartheid to the 2008 global financial crisis, from Covid-19 to greylisting - South Africans have shown resilience in adversity.
This tariff shock, while painful, could become a turning point, especially if aligned with the outcomes of the recent Future of Jobs Summit™.
The time has come to build a youth-powered export economy not reliant on old trade patterns, but on bold new industries and global opportunity.
Here is a 10-step national response strategy - a roadmap to turning Trump's tariff into opportunity for the next generation.
1. Launch a "Jobs Through Exports" National Task Force
The government must move fast to establish a Presidential Jobs and Exports Task Force, composed of trade negotiators, youth employment leaders, industrialists, and tech entrepreneurs.
This task force should develop job-led export policies tied to global growth sectors - digital services, Al, agritech, green energy, and creative industries.
The goal? To link every trade decision to job outcomes.
2. Expand Global Business Services (GBS) to Absorb Displaced Workers
One of South Africa’s most promising job creation stories is the GBS sector, which has already created over 150 000 youth jobs by servicing global clients.
The Future of Jobs Summit™ referenced the plan to grow this to 500 000 by 2030. Now is the time to double down.
Dit verhaal komt uit de July 11, 2025-editie van Cape Times.
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