A shotgun marriage: Employment equity and human resource planning

The current state of human resource planning in South Africa is that many companies conduct virtually no such planning or provide it only for senior managerial positions. Employment equity legislation will, however, force the hand of managers and human resource practitioners in the public and privat...

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Main Authors: Michèle Boonzaier, Billy Boonzaier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 1999-03-01
Series:South African Journal of Business Management
Online Access:https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/752
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spelling doaj-b7ff3baf0a1d461bb36564de215f463d2021-02-02T05:13:54ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Business Management2078-55852078-59761999-03-01301233210.4102/sajbm.v30i1.752472A shotgun marriage: Employment equity and human resource planningMichèle Boonzaier0Billy Boonzaier1Management School, Cape TechnikonManagement School, Cape TechnikonThe current state of human resource planning in South Africa is that many companies conduct virtually no such planning or provide it only for senior managerial positions. Employment equity legislation will, however, force the hand of managers and human resource practitioners in the public and private sectors alike to engage in regular human resource planning. The Employment Equity Act (1998) seeks to address the existing discrepancies in the distribution of jobs, occupations and income amongst South Africans by not only eliminating unfair discrimination in employment, but also making provision for affirmative action measures to promote a diverse and representative workforce. The employment equity audit requires the preparation of a workforce profile and consequent employment equity plan to address discrepancies. The main purpose of human resource planning is to identify future human resource requirements (in terms of numbers, skills, and particular characteristics, inter alia gender, race and disability) and to develop action plans to eliminate any discrepancies between the demand and supply of labour that are forecast. The article presents a comprehensive model of human resource planning, incorporating the practical implications of the Employment Equity Act, as a workable guideline to assist managers in compiling thorough forecasts and action plans in fulfilment of organizational and employment equity requirements.https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/752
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michèle Boonzaier
Billy Boonzaier
spellingShingle Michèle Boonzaier
Billy Boonzaier
A shotgun marriage: Employment equity and human resource planning
South African Journal of Business Management
author_facet Michèle Boonzaier
Billy Boonzaier
author_sort Michèle Boonzaier
title A shotgun marriage: Employment equity and human resource planning
title_short A shotgun marriage: Employment equity and human resource planning
title_full A shotgun marriage: Employment equity and human resource planning
title_fullStr A shotgun marriage: Employment equity and human resource planning
title_full_unstemmed A shotgun marriage: Employment equity and human resource planning
title_sort shotgun marriage: employment equity and human resource planning
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Business Management
issn 2078-5585
2078-5976
publishDate 1999-03-01
description The current state of human resource planning in South Africa is that many companies conduct virtually no such planning or provide it only for senior managerial positions. Employment equity legislation will, however, force the hand of managers and human resource practitioners in the public and private sectors alike to engage in regular human resource planning. The Employment Equity Act (1998) seeks to address the existing discrepancies in the distribution of jobs, occupations and income amongst South Africans by not only eliminating unfair discrimination in employment, but also making provision for affirmative action measures to promote a diverse and representative workforce. The employment equity audit requires the preparation of a workforce profile and consequent employment equity plan to address discrepancies. The main purpose of human resource planning is to identify future human resource requirements (in terms of numbers, skills, and particular characteristics, inter alia gender, race and disability) and to develop action plans to eliminate any discrepancies between the demand and supply of labour that are forecast. The article presents a comprehensive model of human resource planning, incorporating the practical implications of the Employment Equity Act, as a workable guideline to assist managers in compiling thorough forecasts and action plans in fulfilment of organizational and employment equity requirements.
url https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/752
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