South Africa's youth unemployment crisis has reached critical levels, with recent data showing rates as high as 57% for those aged 15-24 in Q4 2025. Amid this backdrop, growing calls to close the Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETAs) are gaining traction, as critics argue these bodies have failed to deliver meaningful skills development despite collecting billions in levies from businesses. A recent opinion piece highlighted that SETAs have accumulated R35 billion in unspent funds while delivering low-value training with qualification rates below 60%. This debate is particularly relevant for higher education institutions like Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges and universities, which rely on SETAs for funding learnerships, artisan training, and labour market alignment.
The controversy underscores deeper systemic issues in South Africa's post-school education and training system, where mismatches between graduate skills and employer needs exacerbate joblessness. As policymakers weigh reform against outright closure, the implications for students pursuing vocational and higher education qualifications are profound, potentially reshaping pathways to employment in a challenging economy.
What Are Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETAs)?
Sector Education and Training Authorities, commonly known as SETAs, are statutory bodies established under the Skills Development Act of 1998 in South Africa. There are 21 SETAs, each aligned to a specific economic sector such as construction, information technology, manufacturing, and services. Their primary mandate is to implement the National Skills Development Strategy by collecting a 1% skills levy from qualifying businesses (those with annual payrolls over R500,000), which totals over R20 billion annually, and redistributing these funds to promote skills development.
SETAs accredit training providers, develop sector skills plans based on labour market intelligence, fund learnerships, internships, and bursaries, and facilitate artisan recognition of prior learning. For higher education, SETAs partner with public TVET colleges—50 across the country offering National Certificate Vocational (NCV) qualifications and Report 191 programmes—and universities to deliver occupationally directed training. For instance, they support workplace-based learning essential for NQF levels 2-5 programmes at TVETs, bridging the gap between classroom theory and practical application.
The process works as follows: Employers pay the levy via the South African Revenue Service (SARS); SETAs grant funds to training providers upon application, monitoring progress through portfolio of evidence submissions. Despite this structure, persistent challenges have led to questions about their efficacy in addressing youth unemployment.
South Africa's Youth Unemployment Crisis: By the Numbers
South Africa's youth unemployment remains one of the world's highest, with Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) reporting a 57% rate for ages 15-24 and 39.2% for 25-34 in Q4 2025. The expanded definition, including discouraged work-seekers, stands at 43.8% for 15-34 year-olds, affecting approximately 5.8 million young people. This crisis is structural, driven by slow economic growth, skills mismatches, and barriers like lack of experience—58.7% of unemployed youth have no prior work history.
- Annual labour market entrants: ~1.2 million youth.
- NEET rate (not in employment, education, or training): 43.2% for 15-34, up from 38.2% in 2014.
- National spending on youth employment: Over R70 billion yearly, including SETA levies.
In the context of higher education, TVET graduates face 40-50% unemployment, while university degrees do not guarantee jobs, prompting scrutiny of skills funders like SETAs.
The Origins and Intended Role of SETAs in Skills Development
Post-apartheid, SETAs were created to democratize skills training, replacing apartheid-era structures and promoting equity. Over 25 years, they have evolved, with recent emphases on artisan development for sectors like mining and renewables. Minister of Higher Education Buti Manamela notes achievements like certifying 509,000 learners (100,000 artisans) from 2019-2023 and investing R5 billion in TVET infrastructure.
Yet, critics point to duplication across 16 government departments and failure to adapt to digital economy needs, leaving higher ed institutions to fill gaps independently.
Explore career advice for research roles that could inspire SA adaptations.Scandals and Failures: Why Critics Demand Closure
SETAs have been rocked by corruption scandals. The Services SETA lost R163 million to fake contracts, while Construction Education and Training Authority (CETA) faced whistleblower exposés on supply chain graft. In 2025, Minister Manamela placed three SETAs under administration due to auditor-general findings of mismanagement.
Key issues:
- Unspent funds: R35 billion in 2023/24.
- Low enrolment: Only 53,518 vs 149,000 target.
- High admin costs: R60 million to directors last year.
A News24 analysis argues training costs exceed university fees but yield poor employment transitions (20-30%). For more on governance, see News24 opinion.
Diverse Stakeholder Views on SETAs' Future
Opposition parties like ActionSA label SETAs 'hollowed out' by cadre deployment, calling for streamlining. The EFF challenged CEO appointments legally. Business groups criticize low-value programmes, while Minister Manamela defends reforms: better governance, SMME support, and growth-sector focus.
On X (formerly Twitter), users echo sentiments like 'Scrap SETAs & Invest in TVETs'. Higher ed leaders urge alignment, with Manamela stressing SETAs' research role for TVET/university curricula.
SETAs' Critical Links to TVET Colleges and Universities
SETAs fund ~600,000 learning interventions yearly, many at 50 public TVET colleges offering artisan trades. Partnerships include learnerships where students earn stipends during workplace training, vital for NQF 2-4 qualifications. Universities like UJ and Stellenbosch collaborate on artisan pipelines.
Manamela (Mar 2026) emphasized: 'SETAs bridge educational institutions and employers via skills plans.' Closure could disrupt R5bn TVET infra investments, forcing institutions to seek alternative funding. Explore higher ed jobs in SA for skills-aligned opportunities.
Consequences for Higher Education Students and Graduates
TVET students risk losing learnership stipends (R4,500-R5,000/month), while university career services struggle without SETA-backed internships. Graduates face employability gaps; only 45% of Youth Employment Service (YES) participants secure permanent jobs.
Cultural context: In townships, SETA-funded programmes offer hope amid poverty. Impacts include delayed artisan certification, worsening skills shortages in green energy and ICT.
South Africa higher ed resources highlight ongoing challenges.Reform Proposals and Viable Alternatives
Critics propose consolidating into one national skills authority, repurposing unspent funds into a National Skills Acceleration Fund for high-impact pilots. Reduce levy to 0.25%, incentivize employer training.
- Strengthen TVET-industry ties.
- Universities lead labour market intel.
- Tax credits for private skills investment.
Manamela prioritizes governance fixes. For actionable advice, check academic CV tips.
Stats SA QLFS Q4 2025Case Studies: SETA Successes and Shortfalls
Success: MICT SETA's post-SONA 2026 skills for digital growth. W&RSETA entrepreneurship programmes evaluated positively.
Failure: Services SETA's R163m corruption, low placements.
TVET example: Sedibeng TVET's industry partnerships boosted employability.
Future Outlook and Actionable Insights for Higher Education
Whether reformed or closed, skills development must prioritize demand-led training. Universities and TVETs should expand work-integrated learning, partnering directly with employers. Future trends: AI, green skills.
Actionable steps:
- Students: Pursue SETA-funded learnerships via college portals.
- Institutions: Align curricula with SETA skills plans.
- Job seekers: Build portfolios for university jobs and higher ed jobs.
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A balanced approach—reform with oversight—could transform higher education's role in curbing youth unemployment.
