Theme: Skills development / workforce
Responsible: DHET / National Treasury
Medium. Institutional resistance from individual SETAs is strong. Treasury fiscal pressure may accelerate reform; consolidation has been proposed since 2012 with limited progress.
Who backs this reform, who needs convincing, and which interests or red lines shape political feasibility.
Backers
17
2 stakeholders
Negotiation weight
9
1 conditional actors
Opposition weight
0
0 opposing actors
Review coverage
0/3
All mapped stance notes are still draft
Provenance warning
Every mapped stakeholder stance for this idea is still draft. The coalition score is directional only until at least the high-influence actors are reviewed.
Coalition Read
Anchor: National Treasury. Highest-leverage swing actor: COSATU.
Political Tractability
No reviewed signals · 0% of mapped influence has been reviewed.
Treasury supports SETA reform to improve skills levy efficiency, recovering billions in under-utilised training funds.
Interest: Fiscal consolidation with public debt stabilising below 75% of GDP; structural reforms that improve revenue without expanding contingent liabilities;…
Concern: Unfunded mandates in energy transition (JETP co-financing); Eskom's R400bn+ debt and how restructuring socialises costs; reform proposals that create…
Engagement path: Reforms must be fiscally neutral or revenue-positive over the MTEF window; SOE restructuring must demonstrably reduce contingent liabilities; credible…
BUSA strongly supports SETA reform, citing chronic levy-grant inefficiency that fails to deliver industry-relevant training.
Interest: Cross-sector structural reform across energy security, logistics efficiency, regulatory certainty, labour market flexibility, and digital infrastructu…
Concern: Slow implementation pace relative to policy announcements; inconsistency between reform rhetoric and regulatory decisions (e.g. NERSA tariff approvals…
Engagement path: Already actively engaged. Seeks implementation accountability mechanisms with published milestones, predictable regulatory timelines, and NEDLAC outco…
COSATU supports SETA reform only if worker representatives retain governance seats and training addresses worker advancement.
Interest: Worker protections under the Labour Relations Act and Basic Conditions of Employment Act; collective bargaining rights; equitable wage growth; just tr…
Concern: Labour market flexibility reforms that erode LRA and BCEA protections; Eskom unbundling without adequate just transition planning for NUM members; pri…
Engagement path: Meaningful social dialogue through NEDLAC before structural reforms are finalised; just transition funding ring-fenced in MTEF; skills retraining and…
South Africa's 21 Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETAs) collect the Skills Development Levy (1% of payroll) — generating approximately R16 billion annually — but disbursement efficiency is chronically low, with large cash reserves accumulating and training output disconnected from labour market demand. The reform involves rationalising the SETA landscape (reducing from 21 to a smaller number aligned with economic clusters), strengthening DHET's oversight of SETA boards, improving mandatory grant disbursement timelines to employers, and redirecting discretionary grants toward occupation-in-demand qualifications. QCTO integration is central to ensuring SETA-funded training leads to recognised qualifications. As of early 2026, DHET has published a SETA rationalisation framework and several mergers are proposed; implementation is contested by SETA incumbents and sector stakeholders with vested interests in existing levy-funded structures.
Referenced in OECD Economic Surveys: South Africa
OECD SA Survey (2017, 2020, 2022, 2025). Education quality improvement is a recurring OECD recommendation across all surveys.
The SETA system collects R20 billion annually and employs 3,000 staff — but certified fewer than 100,000 people in 2023/24. The 2026 Budget commits to a fundamental overhaul; the question is whether governance reform follows the structural change. — IT-Online, February 2026
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How to cite
Wilse-Samson, L. (2026). SETA Reform and Skills Development Levy Efficiency. SA Policy Space. NYU Wagner School of Public Policy. Retrieved 11 May 2026, from https://sa-policy-space.vercel.app/ideas/seta-reform-and-skills-development-levy-efficiency?snapshot=2026-05-11
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Higher Education and Training · Mar 2026
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PMG ↗Data as of 2026-05-11 · latest PMG meeting 2026-05-08
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