Parliamentary Committees Issue Stern Warning on Foreign Hiring Practices 📋
In a pivotal joint session on February 18, 2026, South Africa's Portfolio Committee on Higher Education and Training, chaired by Mr. Tebogo Letsie, convened with the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs to scrutinize the employment of foreign nationals in universities and Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges. The Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) and Department of Home Affairs (DHA) provided briefings, highlighting regulatory frameworks and oversight challenges. This scrutiny comes amid growing concerns that higher education institutions (HEIs) are not fully complying with immigration laws, potentially sidelining qualified South Africans in a sector plagued by high youth unemployment.
The meeting underscored the tension between internationalisation goals—aimed at elevating global competitiveness and research output—and national priorities like job creation and skills development for locals. Committee members emphasized that while foreign expertise is welcome in genuine scarce areas, it must not displace South African talent or violate legal processes.
Unpacking the 7.7% Foreign Staff Statistic in South African Universities 📊
Central to the discussions were DHET's 2024 Higher Education Management Information System (HEMIS) data, revealing that foreign nationals comprise 7.74% of all university staff, with South African (RSA) staff at 92.26%. This figure aggregates permanent and temporary positions: audited permanent staff totaled 65,585, with only 4.6% foreigners; unaudited temporary staff reached 94,049, including 9.92% foreigners (9,327).
Of full-time foreign staff, 82.89% hold instructional or research roles, predominantly in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields where local shortages persist. TVET colleges employ 278 foreign staff, mostly as maths and science lecturers, while Community Education and Training (CET) colleges have 38; notably, 67 TVET foreigners are not linked to critical skills.
| Category | Total Staff | Foreign % |
|---|---|---|
| Universities Permanent (Audited) | 65,585 | 4.6% |
| Universities Temporary (Unaudited) | 94,049 | 9.92% |
| Overall Universities | - | 7.74% |
| TVET Colleges Foreign Staff | 278 | - |
| Non-Critical in TVET | 67 | - |
Variations exist across institutions: University of Fort Hare reports 8.28% foreign staff, Rhodes University just 1.07%. These disparities fuel debates on whether hiring aligns with national needs.
Legal Framework: Immigration Act and Critical Skills Requirements
South Africa's Immigration Act (No. 13 of 2002), particularly Section 38, criminalizes employing undocumented foreign nationals or those without valid work visas. Foreign hires must secure work authorization, prioritizing the National List of Occupations in High Demand (Critical Skills List), which includes senior university lecturers in specified fields like mathematics.
- Institutions must advertise positions locally first, proving no suitable South Africans available.
- Critical Skills Visa streamlines for listed occupations, but requires DHET/DHA verification.
- Processes: Job offer → Skills assessment → Visa application → DHET endorsement for academics.
Non-compliance risks fines, deportation, and reputational damage, yet oversight gaps persist due to unreliable data.
Scarce Skills Debate: Maths Literacy Lecturers Under Fire
Committee chairperson Letsie highlighted contributions in critical subjects like mathematics but questioned hiring foreigners for Mathematical Literacy—a school-level subject emphasizing practical numeracy for non-STEM careers—in TVET colleges. Despite shortages, MPs argued locals should fill such roles, sparking queries on 'scarce skills' misuse.
Foreign STEM lecturers address gaps: South Africa faces chronic maths teacher shortages, with TIMSS rankings lagging. Yet, 67 TVET foreigners in non-critical roles exemplify overreach. Institutions defend: Foreigners bring advanced qualifications, boosting research and global rankings.
Case Studies: UFS and TVET Challenges
The University of the Free State (UFS) faced prior scrutiny in March 2025 for employing 141 foreign academics and 26 support staff, raising equity concerns amid transformation goals. UFS affirmed legal compliance with limited contracts.
In TVETs, 278 foreigners focus on maths/science, but 67 unlinked cases prompt DHET data cleanup. Oversight visits revealed foreigners in principal, CFO roles—non-academic posts.
Stakeholder Perspectives: Balancing Global Talent and Local Needs
DHET stresses foreigners' role in scarce skills, collaborating with DHA and Employment and Labour for better data. Letsie: "We are not against foreign academics... especially in mathematics." But: "Cannot continue at the expense of qualified South Africans."
- Unions/locals: Prioritize unemployed graduates via higher ed jobs platforms.
- Unis: Internationalisation vital; 12% foreign per USAf report aids rankings.
- Social media: X posts debate 7.7%—some call for more skilled imports, others decry job theft.
Impacts on South African Higher Education Landscape
Foreign hiring bolsters STEM research, funding, but risks local demoralization amid 32%+ youth unemployment. Poor compliance erodes trust, delays transformation (e.g., equity targets). Students benefit from diverse expertise but face crowded job markets post-graduation.
For aspiring lecturers, explore higher ed career advice to compete effectively. Institutions must enhance local training via NSFAS, SETAs.
Recommendations: Towards Compliant and Equitable Hiring
- DHET verify data, review 67+ cases.
- Mandatory local advertising, skills audits before foreign hires.
- Strengthen vetting, inter-department coordination.
- Engage Employment and Labour; monitor White Paper reforms.
- Unis prioritize demographics in leadership per Staffing SA Framework.
Committees vow ongoing oversight. For jobs, visit AcademicJobs South Africa or university jobs.
Photo by Samuel Isaacs on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Sustainable Internationalisation in SA HE
As SA aims for 50% GER by 2035, balanced hiring is key. Enhanced local PhD pipelines, AI/STEM investments could reduce shortages. Global partnerships continue, but law-abiding. Watch for Bill tabling, DOL meetings.
Academics: Build profiles on Rate My Professor; seek faculty positions. This scrutiny fosters transparency, benefiting all.
