Legal updates and opinions
News / News
New Earnings Threshold
and Danelle Plaatjies – Candidate Attorney
On 5 March 2024 the Minister of Employment and Labour, Thembelani Waltermade Nxesi, published a Government Gazette providing for the increase of the earnings threshold, as provided for in the Basic Conditions of Employment Act 75 of 1997 (“BCEA”). The increase will be from R241,110.59 to R254,371.67 per annum with effect of 1 April 2024.
The meaning of “Earnings” is set out in the Government Gazette notice as –
“the regular annual remuneration before deductions i.e income tax, pension, medical and similar payments but excluding similar payments(contributions) made by the employer in respect of the employee: Provided that subsistence and transport allowances received, achievement awards and payments for overtime worked shall not be regarded as remuneration for the purpose of this notice.”
Employees who earn in excess of the threshold are excluded from certain provisions of the BCEA including:
- ordinary hours of work (section 9);
- overtime (section 10);
- compressed working weeks (section 11);
- averaging hours of work (section 12);
- meal intervals (section 14);
- daily and weekly rest periods (section 15);
- pay for work on Sundays (section 16);
- pay for night work (section 17(2)); and
- pay for public holidays where the employee works on a day they would not ordinarily work (section 18(3)).
Latest News
Jump the gun, bite the bullet: Consequences of failure to notify a merger in Africa
by Paul Coetser, Director & Head of Competition, and Sandiso Dhlomo, Candidate Attorney It is no longer a surprise that [...]
Taking the Collusion out of Collaboration between Competitors
by Nokwanda Zondi, Candidate Attorney, under supervision of Rudolph Raath, Director The Competition Commission's 2022 'Guidelines on Collaboration Between Competitors [...]
Manna or a bitter pill – a perspective on public interest
Public interest considerations There is little debate around public interest considerations carrying the same weight as competition issues in South [...]
POPIA and consent, the biggest misunderstanding?
“Sometimes you have to travel a long way to find what is near” Paulo Coelho It has been over a [...]
Once empowered, always empowered?
There has been a recent shift in emphasis by the Competition Commission of South Africa (the Commission) from simply protecting [...]
Fake news – The three sisters: Mis, Dis and Mal.
by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Head of Data Privacy and Cybercrime Practice, and Siyabonga Galela, Candidate Attorney Fake news Introduction The Fourth [...]
