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Social welfare programmes in South Africa

South Africa has one of the most extensive social welfare systems among developing countries in the world.[1] In 2019, an estimated 18 million people received some form of social grant provided by the government.[2]

Social welfare programmes have a long history in South Africa.[3] The earliest form of social welfare programme in South Africa is the poor relief distributed by the Dutch East India Company and the Dutch Reformed Church (DRC) in 1657.[4] The institutionalised social welfare system was established after the British occupied the Cape Colony in 1806.[5]

However, the social welfare system focused mainly on poor whites and excluded blacks.[5] Under apartheid, the social welfare services for Africans, Indians and Coloreds were separated from that for whites.[4] The allocation of social welfare resources favoured whites.[5] The post-apartheid government launched the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) in 1994 and published the White Paper for Social Welfare in 1997 to establish the framework of social welfare system in post-apartheid South Africa.[4][6] They were aimed to address racial disparity in the delivery of social welfare services.[4] Growth, Employment and Redistribution (GEAR) was launched in 1996 in response to the 1996 currency crisis.[5] GEAR reduces government's spending, leading to the shrinkage of social grants.[5] Social assistance, including grants and public works, is funded through tax revenue, unlike statutory and voluntary funds that are funded by employers and employees.[7]

Social welfare programmes in South Africa include cash assistance, unemployment insurance, medical provisions, and housing subsidies. Cash assistance is distributed by the South African Social Security Agency on behalf of the Department of Social Development of South Africa (DSD). The cash assistance programmes that are currently available include the Child support Grant, the Foster child Grant, old-age pension, disability grant, care dependency grant, and war veterans grant.[8]

There are both support and criticism regarding the social welfare programmes in South Africa. Supporters argue that grants such as the Child Support Grant and the old-age pension improve the nutrition status and school enrolment rates of poor children.[9][10] However, critics points out corruption and maladministration in the social welfare system and the poor quality of RDP housing.[11][12]

History edit

Pre-apartheid edit

The pre-apartheid social programmes in South Africa was mainly concerned with white poverty.[4] The earliest social welfare programmes in South Africa was the poor relief distributed by the Dutch East India Company and the Dutch Reformed Church (DRC) in 1657.[4] The poor relief aimed at helping white farmers (Boers) whose crops failed and excluded Black farmers from the relief.[4]

The institutionalised social welfare system was established after the British occupied the Cape Colony in 1806.[5] The welfare resources for children and the disabled were created.[5] The organised occupational insurance after retirement was established in the 1920s.[5] However, the occupational insurance after retirement included mostly skilled workers, most of whom were white.[5]

The labour movement organised by poor white industrial workers in the 1920s drew the government's attention to the poor white problem.[5] The Department Of Labor was created to create work opportunities for white labours.[5] The Wage Act in 1925 established a minimum wage for white labours, called "the white survival line," to protect white workers from poverty and ensure white privilege over non-white workers.[5]

In 1937, a state Department of Social Welfare was established.[5] The Department of Social Welfare was responsible for providing social welfare services to the public but its main focus was on poor whites.[5]

Under apartheid edit

In the early 1950s, the social welfare services for African, Indian and Colored persons were separated from the Department of Social Welfare and transferred to the Departments of Bantu Administration, Indian Affairs and Colored Affairs, respectively.[4] The separation of social welfare resources led to unequal allocation of resources based on race.[4] The budget for welfare services for whites were higher than that for the majority blacks and the available grants for whites were more abundant than those for blacks.[5]

Moreover, the way of the delivery of the services also reflected racial discrimination: the grants for whites, Indians, and Coloreds were distributed by check while the grants for Blacks were distributed at mobile sites, such as under trees and in stores.[4]

Occupational retirement insurance was created in the 1920s.[5] However, low skilled labour was not included in the insurance until the 1960s. In the 1960s and 1970s, occupational retirement insurance expanded rapidly to include many low skilled labour, many of whom were black.[5] Meanwhile, trade union movement organised by white workers extended the coverage of occupational retirement insurance to more industries.[5]

In the 1980s, in response to the growing protests against apartheid, the white minority government increased expenditure on social welfare services for black South Africans.[5] According to economist Sampie Terreblanche, "by 1990 whites accounted for only 23% of welfare spending, whilst Coloureds and Indians received 24% and Africans 52%."[13]

Post-apartheid edit

Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) edit

Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) was a South African socio-economic policy framework implemented by the African National Congress (ANC) government of Nelson Mandela in 1994 after months of discussions, consultations and negotiations between the ANC, its Alliance partners the Congress of South African Trade Unions and the South African Communist Party, and "mass organisations in the wider civil society".[14]

The ANC's chief aim in developing and implementing the Reconstruction and Development Programme, was to address the immense socioeconomic problems brought about by apartheid. Specifically, it set its sights on alleviating poverty and addressing the massive shortfalls in social services across the country—something that the document acknowledged would rely upon a stronger macroeconomic environment.[14] Achieving poverty alleviation and a stronger economy were thus seen as deeply interrelated and mutually supporting objectives—development without growth would be financially unsustainable, while growth without development would fail to bring about the necessary structural transformation within South Africa's deeply inequitable and largely impoverished population. Hence the RDP attempted to combine measures to boost the economy such as contained fiscal spending, sustained or lowered taxes, reduction of government debt and trade liberalisation with socially minded social service provisions and infrastructural projects. In this way, the policy took on both socialist and neo-liberal elements—but could not be easily categorised wholly in either camp.

The White Paper for Social Welfare edit

The post-apartheid government published the White Paper for Social Welfare in 1995 and it was adopted by Cabinet in 1997.[5] The White Paper proposed policies and programmes to implement the principles established in RDP. The programmes proposed by the White Paper included Unemployment Insurance, free health care programs for pregnant women and small children, free meals for students, and poor relief that would guarantee a minimum income for families and children.[4][5] The White Paper also integrated the 14 welfare departments based on race and established the Ministry for Welfare and Population Development and nine provincial departments to administer social welfare services.[4]

Growth, Employment and Redistribution (GEAR) edit

GEAR was the conservative macroeconomic policy South African government adopted in response to the 1996 currency crisis in an attempt to regain confidence in domestic and global capital market.[5] GEAR prioritised economic growth, believing that economic growth could solve poverty problem by job creation.[5] GEAR emphasised that economic growth should be led by the private sector and reduced the role state took in economy.[5] As a result, the decrease in public spending led to the elimination or shrinkage of social services.[5]

Types of Programmes edit

Social Security Grants edit

The Child Support Grant (CSG) edit

The Child Support Grant was introduced in 1998.[15] CSG is a cash assistance to poor children under the age of 6 and expanded to children under the age of 14 in 2005.[15] CSG paid the guardians of the eligible children R460 per month per child in 2022 through the South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) under the DSD.[16] According to the National Treasury of South Africa, "the CSG is now one of the largest social assistance programmes in post-apartheid South Africa reaching 11.2 million children in 2012–13, i.e., approximately 59 per cent of children."[9] The government expenditure on CSG accounted for 3.4 per cent of GDP in 2014.[9]

The government did not add any conditions upon the reception of CSG initially.[9] However, since 2010, the children have to attend school to be eligible to receive CSG.[9]

Studies have revealed that the recipients of CSG showed better nutrition status, higher scores on a height to weight growth chart, and better school enrolment rates compared to children who are equally poor.[9][17]

The Foster Child Grant (FCG) edit

Foster parents of children under the age of 15 were eligible for the Foster Child Grant in 2010.[18] Since 2012, the qualification for FCG expanded to include foster children under the age of 18.[18] The value of FCG per month per child is R1050 in 2022, more than twice the size of the Child Support Grant.[19] These benefits are received through cash, direct deposit, or through an overseeing institution.[19] The grant is reviewed every 2 years through a court, and may be suspended or lapse if the child's parental circumstances have changed, the guardians fail to comply with the court, or there is evidence of fraudulence when filing for FCG.[19]

National School Nutrition Program (NSNP) edit

The National School Nutrition Program began in 1994 with a mandate to provide free lunch in all non-fee-paying schools (i.e., those categorized as quintiles 1 through 3 in the South African schools classification system). As of 2020, 9.6 million school children (about two-thirds of whom are primary school students and one-third of whom are secondary school students) benefited from the program. The NSNP reaches an estimated 72% of school-age children in the country. Foods are purchased domestically, and the program is wholly government-funded with a budget of about US$520 million.[20]

Old-age pension edit

The old-age pension accounts for the highest amount of government expenditure among all social assistance programmes in South Africa.[21] The old-age pension was established in South Africa as early as the 1920s.[22] However, the old-age pension system had reflected strong racial inequality until the 1990s.[22] For example, in the early 1980s, whites received benefits 10 times the benefits received by blacks.[22] From 1989 to 1993, the government took efforts to reform the old-age pension to expand it to the entire population and eliminate racial inequality in the pension programme.[22] The benefits blacks received increased from R1555 a year in 1980 to R3081 a year in 1993.[22] The pension programme has not undergone large reforms since 1993 but the government adjusts the monetary value in accordance to inflation rates.[23] In 2010, women aged 60 and above and men aged 61 above could receive R21000 per year.[21]

Disability grant edit

The Department of Social Development offers qualifying residents income support in the form of disability grants via the South African Social Security Agency.[24][25] The 2014 CSDA study showed that the grant was only received by 10% of the disabled people in South Africa.[26] A 2010 study published by the University of Johannesburg, showed that 61% of disabled people living in the 8 poorest wards in Johannesburg were not accessing the state's disability grant due to various reasons, including not knowing that the grant existed.[27]

People with disabilities above the age of 18 are eligible for the disability grant.[21] They can receive R1010 per month per person.[21]

Care Dependency Grant edit

Parents, guardians, and primary caregivers of children with disabilities are able to qualify for the Care Dependency Grant.[28] To qualify, single parents must earn less than R223 200 annually and couples must earn less than R446 400 collectively, with exemptions made for foster parents.[28] The grant provides recipients R1 890 per month via cash, electronic deposit, or administrative institution.[28]

War veterans grant edit

Veterans who fought in the Second World War (1939–1945) or the Korean War (1950–1953) and who are above the age of 60 are eligible to the war veteran grant provided by the Department of Military Veterans.[29] Each veteran can receive R1,800 per month from the South African Social Security Agency.[29] During the Second World War, South Africa sent approximately 200,000 troops to support the Allied Forces and 826 troops to the Korean War in the 2 Squadron.[30][31]

Unemployment Insurance (UI) edit

Unemployment insurance was introduced as early as 1966 through the passage of the first Unemployment Insurance Act.[32] However, the first Unemployment Insurance Act excluded black workers, workers in informal sectors, and civil servants from receiving unemployment benefits.[32] The amended Unemployment Insurance Act was passed in 2001.[32] At present, any employers who contribute to the Unemployment Insurance Fund can receive one day of unemployment benefits for every six days of employment once they become unemployed.[21][32] The contributors can receive up to 238 days of unemployment insurance.[32] However, the unemployment insurance excludes workers in informal sectors, civil servants, and workers who have never worked before.[32]

Healthcare edit

In South Africa, private and public health systems exist in parallel. The public system serves the vast majority of the population. Authority and service delivery are divided between the national Department of Health, provincial health departments, and municipal health departments.[33]

In 2017, South Africa spent 8.1% of GDP on health care, or US$499.2 per capita. Of that, approximately 42% was government expenditure.[34] About 79% of doctors work in the private sector.[35]

Housing edit

In 1994, the post-apartheid government announced its plan to provide one million homes in the next 5 years as part of the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP).[36] The program's goal was to address the housing disparity created during apartheid. The government fulfilled its claim by providing 1,155,300 homes that could house 5,776,300 people by 2000.[36] To address housing disparity during apartheid, the post-apartheid government launched housing subsidies based on recipients' income in 1994.[37] Recipients whose monthly income is below R800 can receive a subsidy of R15,000; recipients whose monthly income ranges from 801 to R1500 receive R12,500; recipients whose monthly income ranges from R1501 to R2500 receive R9,500; recipients whose monthly income ranges from R2501 to R3500 receive R5,000.[37] According to Stats SA's GHS of 2018, "the percentage of households that received some form of government housing subsidy increased from 5.6% in 2002 to 13.6%  in 2018."[38]

Support edit

Supporters of the social welfare programmes in South Africa argue that these programmes have a positive impact on poor people's lives.[36][10] Studies suggest that the children who receive Child Support Grant (CSG) show better nutrition status and better school enrolment rates compared to children who are equally poor.[9] Recipients of CSG are also more likely to find jobs when they grow up.[9] If a woman in the household receives the old-age pension, the girls in the household show better nutrition status than girls in families where no women are receiving the old-age pension.[10] Similarly, women-led households that receive CSG show increased child enrolment in school and the mothers are more likely to participate in the labour market.[39] Domestic child labour is thought to decrease in recipient households.[39]

The RDP housing project provided more than 1 million homes to poor people.[36]

Some people are concerned that social grants foster a "dependency culture" that demotivates the unemployed to search for jobs.[40] However, recent studies suggest that the reception of social grants does not affect jobless people's incentive to seek employment.[40] The main reason is that social grants, such as Child Support Grant, old-age pension, and disability grant, are aimed at supporting people who cannot work due to age or disability.[40] People without disabilities and of working age are not eligible for any grants in South Africa currently.[40]

Criticism edit

Corruption and maladministration are huge problems that exist in South African social welfare system.[11] According to Reddy, South Africa lost R1,5 billion per year through corruption and maladministration in the delivery of social grants.[11]

Despite the government's efforts to provide RDP housing, homelessness continues to increase due to increasing level of unemployment and the lack of affordable housing.[12] Moreover, since the government did not establish a standard building regulations for the developers of RDP housing, many RDP housing units are characterised with inferior quality.[12] Residents complained about the lack of air bricks, roofs without ceilings, improperly built walls, doors that did not open or close properly, lack of privacy, and improperly designed kitchen and lavatory.[12] Additionally, only South African citizens are eligible for RDP housing which excludes a significant population of immigrants that are living in unsuitable housing.[41] Nearly 2,000 government officials were arrested for corruption during the project and several housing projects may be improperly built because of relations between contractors and officials.[41]

The Department of Military Veterans has been accused of skewed distribution of resources, with critics saying some provinces were entirely under served.[42] There is a lack of offices distributed across the country so veterans seeking help must travel to Pretoria for service.[42]

The other criticism with RDP housing units are the lack of basic services such as running water, sewerage and electricity and amenities such as schools and clinics.[12] For example, one of the RDP housing units in Braamfischerville, Soweto, established in 1996, only had one temporary primary school housed in shipping containers and no secondary school nor high school in 2002.[12] The main roads were not paved until 2008.[12] The storm-water drainage system was not installed.[12] RDP housing units are also characterised with small size.[12] RDP homes are also characterised with small size.[43] According to David Pottie, only 30% of all houses built by the government were larger than 30 m2.[43]

  1. ^ Goldblatt, Beth (November 2005). "Gender and social assistance in the first decade of democracy: A case study of South Africa's Child Support Grant". Politikon. 32 (2): 239–257. doi:10.1080/02589340500353581. ISSN 0258-9346. S2CID 145625059.
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  6. ^ Republic of South Africa. (1997). Ministry for Welfare and Population Development. 1997. White Paper for Social Welfare. Notice 1108 of 1997. Government Gazette, 386(18166). Pretoria: Government Printers.
  7. ^ Oosthuizen,Morné. South Africa : Social Assistance Programs and Systems Review (English). Washington, D.C. : World Bank Group. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/238611633430611402/South-Africa-Social-Assistance-Programs-and-Systems-Review
  8. ^ "Social benefits". www.gov.za. South African Government. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
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  14. ^ a b The Reconstruction and Development Programme Preface, Nelson Mandela, 1994
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  16. ^ "Child support grant | South African Government". www.gov.za. Retrieved 31 March 2022.
  17. ^ The South African Child Support Grant Impact Assessment (PDF)
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  19. ^ a b c "Foster child grant | South African Government". www.gov.za. Retrieved 31 March 2022.
  20. ^ "Global Survey of School Meal Programs – Country Reports". Global Child Nutrition Foundation.
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  22. ^ a b c d e Duflo, E. (1 June 2003). "Grandmothers and Granddaughters: Old-Age Pensions and Intrahousehold Allocation in South Africa". The World Bank Economic Review. 17 (>1): 1–25. doi:10.1093/wber/lhg013. hdl:10986/17173. ISSN 1564-698X.
  23. ^ ranchhod, vimal (2006). "The Effect of the South African Old Age Pension on Labour Supply of the Elderly". The South African Journal of Economics. 74 (4): 725–744. doi:10.1111/j.1813-6982.2006.00098.x. ISSN 0038-2280.
  24. ^ World report on disability (PDF), World Health Organization, 2011, p. 70, ISBN 9789240685215
  25. ^ "Disability Grant". South African Social Security Agency. Retrieved 30 September 2014.
  26. ^ Taylor, Theresa. "How to apply for SASSA Disability grant in South Africa". Sassa Disability. Sassa. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  27. ^ "Disabled living in poverty - study". News24. SAPA. 14 May 2010. from the original on 12 October 2014. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  28. ^ a b c "Care Dependency Grant". Money 101. 3 February 2021. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
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  31. ^ "South African Embassy, Seoul". southafrica-embassy.or.kr. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  32. ^ a b c d e f Bhorat, Haroon. (2013). Unemployment insurance in South Africa : a descriptive overview of claimants and claims. Development Policy Research Unit, University of Cape Town. ISBN 978-1-920633-01-1. OCLC 878056155.
  33. ^ Zwarenstein, M. (March 1994). "The structure of South Africa's health service". Africa Health (Spec No): 3–4. ISSN 0141-9536. PMID 12345506.
  34. ^ "WHO Statistical Information System". World Health Organization. Retrieved 23 September 2008.
  35. ^ Ataguba, John Ele-Ojo. "Health Care Financing in South Africa: moving toward universal coverage." Continuing Medical Education. February 2010 Vol. 28, Number 2.
  36. ^ a b c d Gilbert, Alan (2004). "Helping the poor through housing subsidies: lessons from Chile, Colombia and South Africa". Habitat International. 28 (1): 13–40. doi:10.1016/s0197-3975(02)00070-x. ISSN 0197-3975.
  37. ^ a b Tomlinson, Mary R. (1999). "From Rejection to Resignation: Beneficiaries' Views on the South African Government's New Housing Subsidy System". Urban Studies. 36 (8): 1349–1359. Bibcode:1999UrbSt..36.1349T. doi:10.1080/0042098993024. ISSN 0042-0980. PMID 22550671. S2CID 37479195.
  38. ^ "Human settlements | South African Government". www.gov.za. Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  39. ^ a b Leibbrandt, Lilenstein, Shenker, Woolard, Murray, Kezia, Callie, Ingrid (2013). "The influence of social transfers on labour supply: A South African and international review".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  40. ^ a b c d Surender, Rebecca; Noble, Michael; Wright, Gemma; Ntshongwana, Phakama (8 January 2010). "Social Assistance and Dependency in South Africa: An Analysis of Attitudes to Paid Work and Social Grants". Journal of Social Policy. 39 (2): 203–221. doi:10.1017/s0047279409990638. ISSN 0047-2794. S2CID 145249313.
  41. ^ a b Nokulunga-1 Didi-2 Clinton-3, Mashwama-1 Thawala-2 Aigbavboa-3 (27–29 September 2018). Challenges of Reconstruction and Development Program (RDP) Houses in South Africa (PDF). International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Operations Management.{{cite conference}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  42. ^ a b "Delivery of benefits for military veterans, including challenges and database | PMG". pmg.org.za. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  43. ^ a b Pottie, David (2003). "Housing the nation : the politics of low-cost housing policy in South Africa since 1994". Politeia. 22: 119–143 – via Sabinet.

social, welfare, programmes, south, africa, south, africa, most, extensive, social, welfare, systems, among, developing, countries, world, 2019, estimated, million, people, received, some, form, social, grant, provided, government, social, welfare, programmes,. South Africa has one of the most extensive social welfare systems among developing countries in the world 1 In 2019 an estimated 18 million people received some form of social grant provided by the government 2 Social welfare programmes have a long history in South Africa 3 The earliest form of social welfare programme in South Africa is the poor relief distributed by the Dutch East India Company and the Dutch Reformed Church DRC in 1657 4 The institutionalised social welfare system was established after the British occupied the Cape Colony in 1806 5 However the social welfare system focused mainly on poor whites and excluded blacks 5 Under apartheid the social welfare services for Africans Indians and Coloreds were separated from that for whites 4 The allocation of social welfare resources favoured whites 5 The post apartheid government launched the Reconstruction and Development Programme RDP in 1994 and published the White Paper for Social Welfare in 1997 to establish the framework of social welfare system in post apartheid South Africa 4 6 They were aimed to address racial disparity in the delivery of social welfare services 4 Growth Employment and Redistribution GEAR was launched in 1996 in response to the 1996 currency crisis 5 GEAR reduces government s spending leading to the shrinkage of social grants 5 Social assistance including grants and public works is funded through tax revenue unlike statutory and voluntary funds that are funded by employers and employees 7 Social welfare programmes in South Africa include cash assistance unemployment insurance medical provisions and housing subsidies Cash assistance is distributed by the South African Social Security Agency on behalf of the Department of Social Development of South Africa DSD The cash assistance programmes that are currently available include the Child support Grant the Foster child Grant old age pension disability grant care dependency grant and war veterans grant 8 There are both support and criticism regarding the social welfare programmes in South Africa Supporters argue that grants such as the Child Support Grant and the old age pension improve the nutrition status and school enrolment rates of poor children 9 10 However critics points out corruption and maladministration in the social welfare system and the poor quality of RDP housing 11 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre apartheid 1 2 Under apartheid 1 3 Post apartheid 1 3 1 Reconstruction and Development Programme RDP 1 3 2 The White Paper for Social Welfare 1 3 3 Growth Employment and Redistribution GEAR 2 Types of Programmes 2 1 Social Security Grants 2 1 1 The Child Support Grant CSG 2 1 2 The Foster Child Grant FCG 2 1 3 National School Nutrition Program NSNP 2 1 4 Old age pension 2 1 5 Disability grant 2 1 6 Care Dependency Grant 2 1 7 War veterans grant 2 2 Unemployment Insurance UI 2 3 Healthcare 2 4 Housing 3 Support 4 CriticismHistory editPre apartheid edit The pre apartheid social programmes in South Africa was mainly concerned with white poverty 4 The earliest social welfare programmes in South Africa was the poor relief distributed by the Dutch East India Company and the Dutch Reformed Church DRC in 1657 4 The poor relief aimed at helping white farmers Boers whose crops failed and excluded Black farmers from the relief 4 The institutionalised social welfare system was established after the British occupied the Cape Colony in 1806 5 The welfare resources for children and the disabled were created 5 The organised occupational insurance after retirement was established in the 1920s 5 However the occupational insurance after retirement included mostly skilled workers most of whom were white 5 The labour movement organised by poor white industrial workers in the 1920s drew the government s attention to the poor white problem 5 The Department Of Labor was created to create work opportunities for white labours 5 The Wage Act in 1925 established a minimum wage for white labours called the white survival line to protect white workers from poverty and ensure white privilege over non white workers 5 In 1937 a state Department of Social Welfare was established 5 The Department of Social Welfare was responsible for providing social welfare services to the public but its main focus was on poor whites 5 Under apartheid edit In the early 1950s the social welfare services for African Indian and Colored persons were separated from the Department of Social Welfare and transferred to the Departments of Bantu Administration Indian Affairs and Colored Affairs respectively 4 The separation of social welfare resources led to unequal allocation of resources based on race 4 The budget for welfare services for whites were higher than that for the majority blacks and the available grants for whites were more abundant than those for blacks 5 Moreover the way of the delivery of the services also reflected racial discrimination the grants for whites Indians and Coloreds were distributed by check while the grants for Blacks were distributed at mobile sites such as under trees and in stores 4 Occupational retirement insurance was created in the 1920s 5 However low skilled labour was not included in the insurance until the 1960s In the 1960s and 1970s occupational retirement insurance expanded rapidly to include many low skilled labour many of whom were black 5 Meanwhile trade union movement organised by white workers extended the coverage of occupational retirement insurance to more industries 5 In the 1980s in response to the growing protests against apartheid the white minority government increased expenditure on social welfare services for black South Africans 5 According to economist Sampie Terreblanche by 1990 whites accounted for only 23 of welfare spending whilst Coloureds and Indians received 24 and Africans 52 13 Post apartheid edit Reconstruction and Development Programme RDP edit This section is an excerpt from Reconstruction and Development Programme edit Reconstruction and Development Programme RDP was a South African socio economic policy framework implemented by the African National Congress ANC government of Nelson Mandela in 1994 after months of discussions consultations and negotiations between the ANC its Alliance partners the Congress of South African Trade Unions and the South African Communist Party and mass organisations in the wider civil society 14 The ANC s chief aim in developing and implementing the Reconstruction and Development Programme was to address the immense socioeconomic problems brought about by apartheid Specifically it set its sights on alleviating poverty and addressing the massive shortfalls in social services across the country something that the document acknowledged would rely upon a stronger macroeconomic environment 14 Achieving poverty alleviation and a stronger economy were thus seen as deeply interrelated and mutually supporting objectives development without growth would be financially unsustainable while growth without development would fail to bring about the necessary structural transformation within South Africa s deeply inequitable and largely impoverished population Hence the RDP attempted to combine measures to boost the economy such as contained fiscal spending sustained or lowered taxes reduction of government debt and trade liberalisation with socially minded social service provisions and infrastructural projects In this way the policy took on both socialist and neo liberal elements but could not be easily categorised wholly in either camp The White Paper for Social Welfare edit The post apartheid government published the White Paper for Social Welfare in 1995 and it was adopted by Cabinet in 1997 5 The White Paper proposed policies and programmes to implement the principles established in RDP The programmes proposed by the White Paper included Unemployment Insurance free health care programs for pregnant women and small children free meals for students and poor relief that would guarantee a minimum income for families and children 4 5 The White Paper also integrated the 14 welfare departments based on race and established the Ministry for Welfare and Population Development and nine provincial departments to administer social welfare services 4 Growth Employment and Redistribution GEAR edit GEAR was the conservative macroeconomic policy South African government adopted in response to the 1996 currency crisis in an attempt to regain confidence in domestic and global capital market 5 GEAR prioritised economic growth believing that economic growth could solve poverty problem by job creation 5 GEAR emphasised that economic growth should be led by the private sector and reduced the role state took in economy 5 As a result the decrease in public spending led to the elimination or shrinkage of social services 5 Types of Programmes editSocial Security Grants edit The Child Support Grant CSG edit The Child Support Grant was introduced in 1998 15 CSG is a cash assistance to poor children under the age of 6 and expanded to children under the age of 14 in 2005 15 CSG paid the guardians of the eligible children R460 per month per child in 2022 through the South African Social Security Agency SASSA under the DSD 16 According to the National Treasury of South Africa the CSG is now one of the largest social assistance programmes in post apartheid South Africa reaching 11 2 million children in 2012 13 i e approximately 59 per cent of children 9 The government expenditure on CSG accounted for 3 4 per cent of GDP in 2014 9 The government did not add any conditions upon the reception of CSG initially 9 However since 2010 the children have to attend school to be eligible to receive CSG 9 Studies have revealed that the recipients of CSG showed better nutrition status higher scores on a height to weight growth chart and better school enrolment rates compared to children who are equally poor 9 17 The Foster Child Grant FCG edit Foster parents of children under the age of 15 were eligible for the Foster Child Grant in 2010 18 Since 2012 the qualification for FCG expanded to include foster children under the age of 18 18 The value of FCG per month per child is R1050 in 2022 more than twice the size of the Child Support Grant 19 These benefits are received through cash direct deposit or through an overseeing institution 19 The grant is reviewed every 2 years through a court and may be suspended or lapse if the child s parental circumstances have changed the guardians fail to comply with the court or there is evidence of fraudulence when filing for FCG 19 National School Nutrition Program NSNP edit The National School Nutrition Program began in 1994 with a mandate to provide free lunch in all non fee paying schools i e those categorized as quintiles 1 through 3 in the South African schools classification system As of 2020 9 6 million school children about two thirds of whom are primary school students and one third of whom are secondary school students benefited from the program The NSNP reaches an estimated 72 of school age children in the country Foods are purchased domestically and the program is wholly government funded with a budget of about US 520 million 20 Old age pension edit The old age pension accounts for the highest amount of government expenditure among all social assistance programmes in South Africa 21 The old age pension was established in South Africa as early as the 1920s 22 However the old age pension system had reflected strong racial inequality until the 1990s 22 For example in the early 1980s whites received benefits 10 times the benefits received by blacks 22 From 1989 to 1993 the government took efforts to reform the old age pension to expand it to the entire population and eliminate racial inequality in the pension programme 22 The benefits blacks received increased from R1555 a year in 1980 to R3081 a year in 1993 22 The pension programme has not undergone large reforms since 1993 but the government adjusts the monetary value in accordance to inflation rates 23 In 2010 women aged 60 and above and men aged 61 above could receive R21000 per year 21 Disability grant edit This section is an excerpt from Disability in South Africa Social grants edit The Department of Social Development offers qualifying residents income support in the form of disability grants via the South African Social Security Agency 24 25 The 2014 CSDA study showed that the grant was only received by 10 of the disabled people in South Africa 26 A 2010 study published by the University of Johannesburg showed that 61 of disabled people living in the 8 poorest wards in Johannesburg were not accessing the state s disability grant due to various reasons including not knowing that the grant existed 27 People with disabilities above the age of 18 are eligible for the disability grant 21 They can receive R1010 per month per person 21 Care Dependency Grant edit Parents guardians and primary caregivers of children with disabilities are able to qualify for the Care Dependency Grant 28 To qualify single parents must earn less than R223 200 annually and couples must earn less than R446 400 collectively with exemptions made for foster parents 28 The grant provides recipients R1 890 per month via cash electronic deposit or administrative institution 28 War veterans grant edit Veterans who fought in the Second World War 1939 1945 or the Korean War 1950 1953 and who are above the age of 60 are eligible to the war veteran grant provided by the Department of Military Veterans 29 Each veteran can receive R1 800 per month from the South African Social Security Agency 29 During the Second World War South Africa sent approximately 200 000 troops to support the Allied Forces and 826 troops to the Korean War in the 2 Squadron 30 31 Unemployment Insurance UI edit Unemployment insurance was introduced as early as 1966 through the passage of the first Unemployment Insurance Act 32 However the first Unemployment Insurance Act excluded black workers workers in informal sectors and civil servants from receiving unemployment benefits 32 The amended Unemployment Insurance Act was passed in 2001 32 At present any employers who contribute to the Unemployment Insurance Fund can receive one day of unemployment benefits for every six days of employment once they become unemployed 21 32 The contributors can receive up to 238 days of unemployment insurance 32 However the unemployment insurance excludes workers in informal sectors civil servants and workers who have never worked before 32 Healthcare edit This section is an excerpt from Healthcare in South Africa edit In South Africa private and public health systems exist in parallel The public system serves the vast majority of the population Authority and service delivery are divided between the national Department of Health provincial health departments and municipal health departments 33 In 2017 South Africa spent 8 1 of GDP on health care or US 499 2 per capita Of that approximately 42 was government expenditure 34 About 79 of doctors work in the private sector 35 Housing edit In 1994 the post apartheid government announced its plan to provide one million homes in the next 5 years as part of the Reconstruction and Development Programme RDP 36 The program s goal was to address the housing disparity created during apartheid The government fulfilled its claim by providing 1 155 300 homes that could house 5 776 300 people by 2000 36 To address housing disparity during apartheid the post apartheid government launched housing subsidies based on recipients income in 1994 37 Recipients whose monthly income is below R800 can receive a subsidy of R15 000 recipients whose monthly income ranges from 801 to R1500 receive R12 500 recipients whose monthly income ranges from R1501 to R2500 receive R9 500 recipients whose monthly income ranges from R2501 to R3500 receive R5 000 37 According to Stats SA s GHS of 2018 the percentage of households that received some form of government housing subsidy increased from 5 6 in 2002 to 13 6 in 2018 38 Support editSupporters of the social welfare programmes in South Africa argue that these programmes have a positive impact on poor people s lives 36 10 Studies suggest that the children who receive Child Support Grant CSG show better nutrition status and better school enrolment rates compared to children who are equally poor 9 Recipients of CSG are also more likely to find jobs when they grow up 9 If a woman in the household receives the old age pension the girls in the household show better nutrition status than girls in families where no women are receiving the old age pension 10 Similarly women led households that receive CSG show increased child enrolment in school and the mothers are more likely to participate in the labour market 39 Domestic child labour is thought to decrease in recipient households 39 The RDP housing project provided more than 1 million homes to poor people 36 Some people are concerned that social grants foster a dependency culture that demotivates the unemployed to search for jobs 40 However recent studies suggest that the reception of social grants does not affect jobless people s incentive to seek employment 40 The main reason is that social grants such as Child Support Grant old age pension and disability grant are aimed at supporting people who cannot work due to age or disability 40 People without disabilities and of working age are not eligible for any grants in South Africa currently 40 Criticism editCorruption and maladministration are huge problems that exist in South African social welfare system 11 According to Reddy South Africa lost R1 5 billion per year through corruption and maladministration in the delivery of social grants 11 Despite the government s efforts to provide RDP housing homelessness continues to increase due to increasing level of unemployment and the lack of affordable housing 12 Moreover since the government did not establish a standard building regulations for the developers of RDP housing many RDP housing units are characterised with inferior quality 12 Residents complained about the lack of air bricks roofs without ceilings improperly built walls doors that did not open or close properly lack of privacy and improperly designed kitchen and lavatory 12 Additionally only South African citizens are eligible for RDP housing which excludes a significant population of immigrants that are living in unsuitable housing 41 Nearly 2 000 government officials were arrested for corruption during the project and several housing projects may be improperly built because of relations between contractors and officials 41 The Department of Military Veterans has been accused of skewed distribution of resources with critics saying some provinces were entirely under served 42 There is a lack of offices distributed across the country so veterans seeking help must travel to Pretoria for service 42 The other criticism with RDP housing units are the lack of basic services such as running water sewerage and electricity and amenities such as schools and clinics 12 For example one of the RDP housing units in Braamfischerville Soweto established in 1996 only had one temporary primary school housed in shipping containers and no secondary school nor high school in 2002 12 The main roads were not paved until 2008 12 The storm water drainage system was not installed 12 RDP housing units are also characterised with small size 12 RDP homes are also characterised with small size 43 According to David Pottie only 30 of all houses built by the government were larger than 30 m2 43 Goldblatt Beth November 2005 Gender and social assistance in the first decade of democracy A case study of South Africa s Child Support Grant Politikon 32 2 239 257 doi 10 1080 02589340500353581 ISSN 0258 9346 S2CID 145625059 Magubane Khulekani SA grants system on par with the world s best says dept of social development Fin24 Retrieved 28 April 2022 Drie Maria van The Social Grants and Black Women in South Africa A Case Study of Bophelong Township in Gauteng Journal of International Women s Study 10 127 143 via Google Scholar a b c d e f g h i j k l Brown Marquessa Neku R J 1 May 2005 A historical review of the South African social welfare system and social work practitioners views on its current status International Social Work 48 3 301 312 doi 10 1177 0020872805051733 ISSN 0020 8728 S2CID 144890743 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Visser Wessel 18 June 2014 From RDP to Gear to Post Polokwane The Anc and the Provision of Social Security for Post Apartheid South Africa Social Work Maatskaplike Werk 45 3 doi 10 15270 45 3 201 ISSN 2312 7198 Republic of South Africa 1997 Ministry for Welfare and Population Development 1997 White Paper for Social Welfare Notice 1108 of 1997 Government Gazette 386 18166 Pretoria Government Printers Oosthuizen Morne South Africa Social Assistance Programs and Systems Review English Washington D C World Bank Group http documents worldbank org curated en 238611633430611402 South Africa Social Assistance Programs and Systems Review Social benefits www gov za South African Government Retrieved 21 April 2020 a b c d e f g h Patel Leila Knijn Trudie Van Wel Frits 20 January 2015 Child Support Grants in South Africa A Pathway to Women s Empowerment and Child Well being Journal of Social Policy 44 2 377 397 doi 10 1017 s0047279414000919 ISSN 0047 2794 S2CID 145315781 a b c Duflo Esther 1 June 2003 Grandmothers and Granddaughters Old Age Pensions and Intrahousehold Allocation in South Africa The World Bank Economic Review 17 1 1 25 doi 10 1093 wber lhg013 hdl 10986 17173 ISSN 0258 6770 a b c Trusha Reddy 2008 Corruption and social grants in South Africa Institute for Security Studies Monographs 2008 94 via Sabinet a b c d e f g h i Moolla Raeesa Kotze Nico Block Liz 2011 Housing satisfaction and quality of life in RDP houses in Braamfischerville Soweto A South African case study Urbani Izziv 22 1 138 143 doi 10 5379 urbani izziv en 2011 22 01 005 ISSN 0353 6483 Terreblanche Sampie 2002 A history of inequality in South Africa 1652 2002 University of Natal Press OCLC 606992606 a b The Reconstruction and Development Programme Preface Nelson Mandela 1994 a b Triegaardt Jean D 2005 The Child Support Grant in South Africa a social policy for poverty alleviation International Journal of Social Welfare 14 4 249 255 doi 10 1111 j 1369 6866 2005 00367 x ISSN 1468 2397 Child support grant South African Government www gov za Retrieved 31 March 2022 The South African Child Support Grant Impact Assessment PDF a b Thurman Tonya R Kidman Rachel Taylor Tory M 1 January 2015 Bridging the gap The impact of home visiting programs for orphans and vulnerable children on social grant uptake in South Africa Children and Youth Services Review 48 111 116 doi 10 1016 j childyouth 2014 12 002 ISSN 0190 7409 a b c Foster child grant South African Government www gov za Retrieved 31 March 2022 Global Survey of School Meal Programs Country Reports Global Child Nutrition Foundation a b c d e Kaseke Edwell 2010 The role of social security in South Africa International Social Work 53 2 159 168 doi 10 1177 0020872809355394 ISSN 0020 8728 S2CID 143636774 a b c d e Duflo E 1 June 2003 Grandmothers and Granddaughters Old Age Pensions and Intrahousehold Allocation in South Africa The World Bank Economic Review 17 gt 1 1 25 doi 10 1093 wber lhg013 hdl 10986 17173 ISSN 1564 698X ranchhod vimal 2006 The Effect of the South African Old Age Pension on Labour Supply of the Elderly The South African Journal of Economics 74 4 725 744 doi 10 1111 j 1813 6982 2006 00098 x ISSN 0038 2280 World report on disability PDF World Health Organization 2011 p 70 ISBN 9789240685215 Disability Grant South African Social Security Agency Retrieved 30 September 2014 Taylor Theresa How to apply for SASSA Disability grant in South Africa Sassa Disability Sassa Retrieved 7 October 2014 Disabled living in poverty study News24 SAPA 14 May 2010 Archived from the original on 12 October 2014 Retrieved 7 October 2014 a b c Care Dependency Grant Money 101 3 February 2021 Retrieved 3 April 2022 a b War veterans grant South African Government www gov za Retrieved 18 March 2020 South Africa World War II Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 29 April 2022 South African Embassy Seoul southafrica embassy or kr Retrieved 29 April 2022 a b c d e f Bhorat Haroon 2013 Unemployment insurance in South Africa a descriptive overview of claimants and claims Development Policy Research Unit University of Cape Town ISBN 978 1 920633 01 1 OCLC 878056155 Zwarenstein M March 1994 The structure of South Africa s health service Africa Health Spec No 3 4 ISSN 0141 9536 PMID 12345506 WHO Statistical Information System World Health Organization Retrieved 23 September 2008 Ataguba John Ele Ojo Health Care Financing in South Africa moving toward universal coverage Continuing Medical Education February 2010 Vol 28 Number 2 a b c d Gilbert Alan 2004 Helping the poor through housing subsidies lessons from Chile Colombia and South Africa Habitat International 28 1 13 40 doi 10 1016 s0197 3975 02 00070 x ISSN 0197 3975 a b Tomlinson Mary R 1999 From Rejection to Resignation Beneficiaries Views on the South African Government s New Housing Subsidy System Urban Studies 36 8 1349 1359 Bibcode 1999UrbSt 36 1349T doi 10 1080 0042098993024 ISSN 0042 0980 PMID 22550671 S2CID 37479195 Human settlements South African Government www gov za Retrieved 11 March 2020 a b Leibbrandt Lilenstein Shenker Woolard Murray Kezia Callie Ingrid 2013 The influence of social transfers on labour supply A South African and international review a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d Surender Rebecca Noble Michael Wright Gemma Ntshongwana Phakama 8 January 2010 Social Assistance and Dependency in South Africa An Analysis of Attitudes to Paid Work and Social Grants Journal of Social Policy 39 2 203 221 doi 10 1017 s0047279409990638 ISSN 0047 2794 S2CID 145249313 a b Nokulunga 1 Didi 2 Clinton 3 Mashwama 1 Thawala 2 Aigbavboa 3 27 29 September 2018 Challenges of Reconstruction and Development Program RDP Houses in South Africa PDF International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Operations Management a href Template Cite conference html title Template Cite conference cite conference a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b Delivery of benefits for military veterans including challenges and database PMG pmg org za Retrieved 29 April 2022 a b Pottie David 2003 Housing the nation the politics of low cost housing policy in South Africa since 1994 Politeia 22 119 143 via Sabinet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social welfare programmes in South Africa amp oldid 1213908243, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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