The Parliamentary Push for Accountability in Higher Education Hiring
South Africa's higher education landscape is under intense scrutiny as the Portfolio Committee on Higher Education and Training demands greater transparency in the employment of foreign academics. This move stems from ongoing concerns that some universities and Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges are hiring foreign nationals for positions that do not qualify under the country's Critical Skills List, potentially sidelining qualified local talent.
The Critical Skills List, officially known as the Critical Skills Work Visa list, is a government-maintained roster of occupations where South Africa faces verified shortages. Managed by the Department of Home Affairs (DHA) in collaboration with sector departments like the Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET), it allows eligible foreign professionals to obtain visas without first advertising the job locally. For academics, this typically applies to specialized fields like advanced STEM research, but not administrative or basic teaching roles.
Chairperson Tebogo Letsie emphasized that while internationalisation enriches universities, it cannot justify bypassing immigration laws. "We are not against foreign academics. We recognise the important contribution many make, especially in critical subjects such as mathematics," he stated during a joint committee meeting on February 18, 2026.
Revealing the Numbers: Foreign Staff in South African Universities
Audited data from the DHET's Higher Education Management Information System (HEMIS) for 2024 paints a picture of moderate foreign presence. Out of 65,585 permanent university staff, only 4.6% were foreign nationals, rising to 9.92% among 94,049 temporary employees. Overall, foreigners comprise 7.7% of university personnel, with 82.89% in instructional or research roles.
| Institution Type | Total Staff | Foreign % (Permanent) |
|---|---|---|
| Universities | 65,585 | 4.6% |
| TVET Colleges | ~22,000 | 1.3% |
| Community Colleges | - | 0.3% |
Variations exist across institutions; for instance, the University of South Africa (Unisa) reports 2.29% foreign staff, while the University of Zululand stands at 1.99%. However, critics point to higher figures in permanent academic posts, exceeding 12% nationally according to Universities South Africa (USAf).
In TVETs, at least 67 foreign hires lack links to scarce skills, prompting immediate review. These numbers fuel debates amid South Africa's youth unemployment rate hovering above 30%, questioning if local PhD holders and emerging scholars are being overlooked.
For those navigating this job market, platforms like higher-ed-jobs offer insights into available positions at South African universities.
Understanding the Critical Skills Framework
The Critical Skills Work Visa, governed by Section 19(4) of the Immigration Act 13 of 2002, bypasses labour market testing if the applicant's occupation matches the list. Updated periodically, the 2023-2026 list emphasizes engineering, ICT, health, and select academic specializations like data science professors or biotech researchers—but excludes general lecturing or admin.
- Eligibility Steps: Obtain SAQA evaluation of foreign qualifications, secure job offer from accredited institution, prove skills match list.
- Duration: Up to 5 years, with skill transfer to locals mandatory.
- Penalties: Hiring without compliance is criminal under Section 38.
Institutions must advertise locally first unless critical skills apply, ensuring no suitable South African exists. This protects jobs while allowing genuine gap-filling.
MPs' Key Concerns and Specific Grievances
During oversight, MPs highlighted foreign nationals in non-academic roles like CFOs, principals, and even teaching mathematical literacy—a non-scarce skill. "Why hire foreigners for maths lit when locals are available?" queried one MP. Weak data vetting and coordination between DHET, DHA, and Employment and Labour were flagged, with calls to end misuse of 'internationalisation' as cover.
The March 2 directive mandates DHET submit by March 18 a per-institution list of non-scarce foreign academics, escalating scrutiny.
Photo by Irvin Liang on Unsplash
DHET and Government Response
Minister Buti Manamela defended the system, noting stable foreign percentages and R2 billion invested in local academic development. DHET stresses foreigners fill STEM gaps where South Africa produces few PhDs annually—only about 1,500 new ones versus thousands needed. The 2020 Internationalisation Policy Framework guides balanced hiring.
Government rejects preferential treatment claims, committing to data cleanup and inter-departmental meetings.Official Parliament Statement
Case Studies: TVETs and Universities Under the Spotlight
In TVETs, the 67 flagged hires highlight vetting failures. Universities like Wits and UCT, with global rankings, rely on foreigners for research but face questions on admin hires. Past controversies include Free State universities denying favouritism, below national averages.
Foreign academics counter that claims stoke xenophobia, arguing they mentor locals and boost outputs.
Balancing Local Talent Development and Global Expertise
South Africa's PhD scarcity persists: low production amid funding cuts and supervision bottlenecks. Foreign experts aid research, with 82% in teaching/research, but locals decry contract precarity. Solutions include mentorship mandates and bursaries.
Stakeholders urge higher-ed career advice for aspiring academics, including PhD pathways.
Implications for Job Seekers and the Sector
- Increased compliance may open more local opportunities.
- Data transparency aids planning.
- Risk of talent flight if over-regulated.
Check rate-my-professor for institution insights; explore university jobs.
Path Forward: Oversight, Reforms, and Opportunities
Upcoming meetings with Employment and Labour promise holistic fixes. For professionals, this underscores verifying scarce status. AcademicJobs.com positions as key resource amid changes.Faculty positions await qualified South Africans.
In summary, Parliament's demand signals commitment to equitable hiring, benefiting South Africa's higher education future.
