08/05/2026
So, why do South Africans prefer to employ Basotho? 🧑🌾👷👩🍼
South Africans often prefer employing Lesotho nationals due to a mix of economic pragmatism, cultural affinities, and labour market dynamics shaped by geography and history. This preference persists despite rising anti-foreigner movements like March & March, as employers weigh reliability against cheaper wages and fewer entitlements.
HISTORICAL LABOUR TIES:
Lesotho’s economy has long functioned as a labor reserve for South Africa, dating to the 19th-century Basotho Wars and apartheid-era mine recruitment. By the 1970s-1980s, Basotho outnumbered other migrants in gold mines, valued for their endurance in harsh conditions. Even as mining mechanized post-1990s, bilateral pacts like the Lesotho Exemption Permit (extended into 2026) legalized their flows, embedding Basotho in Free State farms, Gauteng construction, and domestic work. Unlike Zimbabweans or Nigerians, Basotho benefit from proximity – many commute daily across the Caledon River – and shared Sotho languages (Sesotho with Afrikaans/English fluency), easing integration.
COST ADVANTAGES:
Wage gaps drive the choice: Lesotho’s GDP per capita lags SA’s by 4:1, so Basotho accept R3,000-R5,000/month for farmhand or cleaner roles versus SA workers’ R7,000+ demands. They rarely negotiate unions or insist on minimum wage enforcement, reducing payroll costs by 20-40%. No family burdens like school fees mean lower absenteeism; remittances motivate diligence without SA-style benefits claims. Informal employers dodge UIF contributions, as Basotho often hold temporary permits.
WORK ETHIC AND RELIABILITY:
Employers praise Basotho’s “no-nonsense” attitude: punctual, hardworking, and loyal, shaped by Lesotho’s 27% unemployment and rural poverty. Free State farmers note they endure 12-hour shifts in snow or heat without complaint, unlike “entitled” locals. Construction bosses in Bloemfontein value their border-crossing flexibility – arriving pre-dawn via Maseru Bridge taxis – versus SA youth distracted by TikTok or grants. Low alcohol/drug issues (tied to Lesotho’s teetotaller culture) cut turnover; many stay years, building trust.
LOW ENTITLEMENT RISKS
Basotho shun labour disputes: deportation fears deter strikes, unlike vocal SA unions. They accept live-in arrangements without housing allowances and can multitask (e.g., cooking while gardening)...
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Read the full article: https://maserumetro.com/2026/05/07/so-why-do-south-africans-prefer-to-employ-basotho/