The agreement between Anglo American Plc’s platinum unit, the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union and National Union of Mineworkers and the UASA union is effective from July. It may help calm investor nerves about labor unrest in the mining sector, as about 163,000 workers in South Africa’s platinum industry press for a share of windfall profits generated by a rally in metal prices.
Amplats is prepared to share its windfall profits with employees, Chief Executive Officer Natascha Viljoen said. “When we saw really good prices, that is where we build into our employee share scheme, a process that if times are good, we also share if the times are good,” she said.With the specter of South Africa’s longest-ever mining strike in 2014 looming over negotiations, producers of platinum-group metals have lately settled on wage deals fairly smoothly.
Amplats agreed to give its workers a monthly increase of 1,150 rand in the first year of the deal, which will then climb to 1,500 rand by the fifth year. A 7.5% increase for the lowest paid workers is above South Africa’s 5.9% inflation rate in April. The company will keep working toward lifting the wages of the lowest paid, Viljoen said. Amplats and the unions are flexible about renegotiating the agreement if South Africa’s inflation climbs above 7.5% or falls below 3%, she said.