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South African Social Security Agency

The South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) is a national agency of the South African government created in April 2005 to administer South Africa's social security system, including by distributing social grants, on behalf of the Department of Social Development (DSD). It is under the oversight, but not the operational control, of DSD and the Ministry of Social Development.[1] Established in terms of the Social Assistance Act of 2004 and South African Social Security Agency Act of 2004, SASSA is a public entity in terms of Schedule 3A of the Public Finance Management Act.[2] As of 2022 its chief executive officer was Busisiwe Memela-Khambula.[3]

SASSA was founded in 2005 to centralise the provision of social security assistance, formerly a primarily provincial function, in order to reduce corruption and improve service delivery.[4] It was closely modelled on its Australian counterpart, Centrelink.[4] Its key functions relate to the administration and payment of social grants, which support a large proportion of the South African population: in 2022, 46% of South Africans received a social grant.[5] SASSA's functions including processing applications for social security assistance, verifying and approving applications, disbursing and paying the grants to eligible beneficiaries, and preventing and detecting fraud.[2] SASSA employs biometric technology, including fingerprint and facial recognition, to verify the identity of beneficiaries. This helps ensure that the grants reach the intended recipients and reduce the risk of identity theft and fraud.

Types of grants Edit

The social assistance disbursed by SASSA takes the form of various grants; most of them are means-tested and paid in cash on a monthly basis. These are the Child Support Grant, the Care Dependency Grant, the Foster Child Grant, the Disability Grant, the Grant-in-Aid, the Older Person's Grant (an old-age pension), and the War Veteran's Grant.[6] A special case is the three-month Social Relief of Distress Grant, which provides immediate temporary assistance in the form of vouchers, food parcels, or cash.[7][6] The temporary Covid-19 Social Relief of Distress grant was introduced in May 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic;[8] in October 2022, Enoch Godongwana, the Minister of Finance, announced that it would be extended to remain in place until March 2024.[9][10]

In 2015, of the R155.3 billion given in social welfare, R53.5 billion went to pensioners, R47.8 billion to Child Support Grants, R20.2 billion to Disability Grants, and R8.5 billion for other grants, with the remainder spent on management and administration.[11]

SASSA announced that All Grants would be increased from 1 April 2023. The Older Persons Grant will be increased to R2080 (for recipients between 60 and 74) and R2100 (for recipients over 75 years old).

Recipients of the Disability Grant and the Care Dependency Grant will be increased to R2080, while the Child Support Grant will be increased to R500 (with the top-up increasing to R250).

The Foster Child grant will increase to R1120, with the War Veteran grant increasing to R2100 and lastly, the Grant-In-Aid increasing to R500.

Further increases will be effected from 1 October 2024.

The SRD Grant remains at R350 and is being extended until 31 March 2024.

sassa R350 grant is designed to help unemployed South African between the age of 18 - 59 years with no source of income.

SASSA aims to eliminate long queues at its local offices across the country, so that beneficiaries can have smooth experience when applying for their Social Grants.

SASSA Internship Programme

Applicants interested applying for SASSA Internship Programme should send their applications (Fully completed Z83, Identity Document or Smart Card, detailed CV and certified copies of Senior certificate and post matric qualification acquired quoting the relevant reference number to the relevant address and position name as per the advert. The subject heading of the email should indicate North West Internship Programme name you are applying for. Kindly note that other documents e.g. Certificates, ID and Driver’s Licence etc. should be submitted upon request.


Operation Edit

In January 2012, Cash Paymaster Services (CPS), a subsidiary of Net1 UEPS Technologies, was awarded a five-year, R10 billion tender to distribute social grants on behalf of SASSA from February 2012.[11][12] A rival bidder, AllPay, challenged the procurement process in court; in 2014 the Constitutional Court found that irregular processes had been followed, and consequently declared the tender invalid, but suspended the order in order not to interrupt grant payments, and to allow SASSA an opportunity to initiate a new tender process.[13][14]

Each month, the National Treasury deposits the total amount to be paid out into a Nedbank trust account. Interest earned during this period goes to the state. All beneficiary accounts are held at Grindrod Bank.[11]

A grant recipient can withdraw their grant from any SASSA paypoint across the country, which carries no withdrawal charge, and which Net1 CEO Serge Belamont claims is more secure because of the biometric security checks on fingerprints; or from designated retailers such as Pick n Pay, which work with EasyPay, another company owned by Net1, to allow these withdrawals; or from ATMs.[11]

Moneyline, another Net1 company, provides loans to grant recipients. Umoya Manje, also another company owned by Net1, allows grant beneficiaries to buy cellphone airtime on credit.[11]

Grants crisis Edit

In December 2014, a ministerial task team concluded that SASSA itself should take over the paying out of grants.[15] In 2015, SASSA issued a new tender but did not award it,[11] opting instead to insource the disbursement of grants by 2017.[16]

In the 2015/2016 financial year, SASSA recorded additional, irregular expenditure on the CPS contract for the re-registration of grant beneficiaries because legal requirements had been circumvented.[17]

The then Finance Minister, Pravin Gordhan advised the Minister of Social Development Bathabile Dlamini to award a new contract to commercial South African banks and the South African Post Office (SAPO),[16] and forego biometric identification, which contract requirement disadvantaged others bidders against CPS. However, this proposal was rejected on the grounds that the biometric system had eliminated fraudulent claims amounting to R2 billion annually;[18] that further work to remove duplicate entries could save another R2 billion annually; and that SAPO did not have a banking licence, nor enough post offices to properly distribute grants.[13][17] Dlamini expressed a desire to remain with CPS until SASSA was capable to take over, reasoning that this posed the least risk of SASSA defaulting on grant payments.[14] She claimed that the process to distribute grants through SASSA was well underway, insisting that the Department was halfway through a four-phase plan which would culminate in 2019 with the handing over of the responsibility to SASSA.[15]

Dlamini claimed in 2017 that she had only become aware in October 2016 that SASSA was likely to be unable to take over grants payments from April 2017.[17]

SASSA estimated it would pay CPS about R3.5 billion annually under a renewed contract, between 52% and 59% more than it already did. SASSA later denied that it had done such estimation, and then claimed that it was a simple inflation-related adjustment, which was not true.[19][20]

Dlamini had been advised in October 2016 that the DSD was obliged to engage in competitive tendering, and could therefore not sign a contract with CPS; she was informed that the grants crisis was also not a justification to continue using CPS, since the emergency had been self-created; and she also received a legal opinion from senior counsel Wim Trengove that the extant CPS contract could not be legally extended since it had already been ruled invalid by the Constitutional Court.[19]

In December 2016, SASSA was also advised to inform the Constitutional Court of its predicament, "that it faced the highly irregular prospect of going into contract for another year with [CPS]". The Agency waited until 28 February 2017 to lodge a plea, which it immediately withdrew the next day, using a letter dated the previous day.[20]

In February 2017, SASSA told Parliament's social development portfolio committee it had come up short in attempts to find working solutions to pay social grants, and claimed that the only way to make social grant payments from April was to stick with the service provider whose contract had been declared invalid.[16][21]

SASSA's Zodwa Mvulane told Parliament in March 2017 that they "only had a year, from September 2015, to prepare for being a paymaster". However, SASSA only began preparations in December, and it had until then been ignored for years. While SASSA told Parliament it had not had enough time, it had also claimed before the Constitutional Court that it would not need CPS a year after the 2017/2018 financial year—contradicting a letter by Dlamini, sent on 2 February, that stated CPS would no longer be needed at the end of 2019, and another letter sent a week later by SASSA chief executive Thokozani Magwaza, which claimed that the contract with CPS would only last until November 2018—both longer than a year.[20]

The Black Sash Trust, through representation by the Centre for Applied Legal Studies, launched an application to the Constitutional Court, asking it to compel Dlamini and SASSA to take necessary measures to ensure the social grants system and its beneficiaries were protected when the CPS contract ended on 31 March.[12] On 6 March 2017, the contract with Cash Paymaster Services was renewed, and the Constitutional Court's order of invalidity with regard to that contract again suspended, for another year. The Court held that no party had “any claim to profit from the threatened invasion of people’s rights” but also understood that CPS could not be expected to deliver grants at a loss; it therefore ordered CPS to continue to deliver social grants at the same price it had contracted for in 2012.[22]

The Constitutional Court found that "the responsible functionaries of SASSA" had been aware from April 2016 that they could not comply with their undertaking to the Court previously that they would be able to pay social grants from 1 April 2017.[22] The Constitutional Court held Dlamini primarily responsible for the crisis,[23] with Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng saying there was no explanation for the incompetence displayed by her and SASSA.[24] According to constitutional scholar Pierre de Vos, the Constitutional Court had concluded that SASSA and Dlamini could not be trusted to do their constitutionally mandated job to ensure delivery of social grants, and could not be trusted not to lie to the courts in the future.[22]

Between 2013 and 2017, the DSD spent R30 million on the costs of legal appeals involving SASSA.[25]

Unauthorised deductions Edit

In 2004, the DSD amended the Social Assistance Act in order to disallow anyone other than the beneficiary to deduct money from their account.[12][17]

However, 10,262 complaints about deductions were made between April 2015 and March 2016, and the DSD itself claimed "for the past two to three years" to have been fighting illegal deductions from social grants.[26] Many of the unauthorised deductions were claimed by CPS to be repayment of non-existent Moneyline loans,[1][27] and sales of airtime and electricity.[26]

In June 2016, SASSA, the Black Sash, and the Association of Community Advice Office (ACAOSA) laid criminal charges against the directors of CPS and Grindrod Bank, claiming that the two companies were not implementing amended regulations under the Social Assistance Act, which amendments compelled companies not to deduct money from social grant beneficiary accounts for financial services.[26] The criminal charges were frozen until October, when Net1 was to receive clarity from a High Court as to regulations.[28] In a founding affidavit lodged with the North Gauteng High Court, Black Sash asked the court to ring-fence social grant accounts in order to protect grant beneficiaries from exploitation or abuse, and to prevent companies from soliciting beneficiaries around SASSA paypoints[29]—practices which Black Sash and the DSD accused Net1 and its subsidiaries of encouraging.[30]


References Edit

  1. ^ a b Maregele, Barbara (2016-03-07). "Sassa shows "contempt" for poor – Social Development". Ground Up. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  2. ^ a b "Public entities and statutory bodies". Department of Social Development. 2008-09-25. Retrieved 2017-05-09.
  3. ^ "Chief Executive Officer". SASSA. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  4. ^ a b Reddy, Trusha (2008). Corruption and Social Grants in South Africa. Institute for Security Studies. pp. 47–54. ISBN 978-1-920114-54-1.
  5. ^ Human, By Liezl (2022-02-23). "Finance Minister announces 2022 social grant increases". GroundUp News. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  6. ^ a b "Everything you need to know about social grants". GroundUp News. 2022. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  7. ^ "SASSA Status Check". Sassa Check. 2023-09-07. Retrieved 2023-02-07.
  8. ^ Köhler, Tim; Bhorat, Haroon (2020-11-20). "Lockdown economics in South Africa: Social assistance and the Ramaphosa stimulus package". Brookings. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  9. ^ "Truth about Sassa SRD r350 Grant Extension until March 2024". SRD Status. 2023-10-03. Retrieved 2023-10-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  10. ^ Magubane, Khulekani (2 October 2022). "SRD grant extended for another year, but solution must be found, says Godongwana". News24. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  11. ^ a b c d e f "Spotlight on social grants: How the system works". Ground Up. 2015-10-07. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  12. ^ a b c Mzekandaba, Simnikiwe (2017-03-01). "SASSA fails to get affairs in order". ITWeb Technology News. Retrieved 2017-05-07.
  13. ^ a b Gallens, Mahlatse (2017-02-16). "Dlamini rejects Gordhan's social grants proposal". News24. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  14. ^ a b "Minister & SASSA on readiness to implement Constitutional Court ruling". Parliamentary Monitoring Group. 2017-02-22.
  15. ^ a b "Sassa changes its tune: No deal yet with CPS". The Citizen. 2017-03-05. Retrieved 2017-05-07.
  16. ^ a b c Mzekandaba, Simnikiwe (2017-02-17). "Social grants conundrum continues". ITWeb Technology News. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  17. ^ a b c d October, Alicestine (2017-03-09). "10 things to note about the Sassa crisis". CityPress. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  18. ^ Ndaba, Baldwin (2015-02-15). "Gordhan, Dlamini square off on grants issue". Independent Online. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  19. ^ a b Wet, Phillip de (2014-03-05). "Minister Dlamini: Sassa crisis? That's a media invention". The M&G Online. Retrieved 2017-05-08.
  20. ^ a b c Wet, Phillip de (2017-03-03). "A litany of lies: Sassa's greatest hits". The M&G Online. Retrieved 2017-05-08.
  21. ^ "Sassa faces yet another glitch". eNCA. 2017-02-01. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  22. ^ a b c de Vos, Pierre (2017-03-17). "Sassa grant crisis: In this game of thrones, can Social Development Minister Bathabile Dlamini survive?". The Daily Maverick. Retrieved 2017-05-08.
  23. ^ Quintal, Genevieve (2017-03-17). . Business Day Live. Archived from the original on 2017-03-17. Retrieved 2017-05-09.
  24. ^ Chabalala, Jeanette; Raborife, Mpho (2017-03-15). "No explanation for Sassa, Dlamini's 'incompetence' - Mogoeng". News24. Retrieved 2017-05-09.
  25. ^ Dentlinger, Lindsay (2017-04-13). "Social Development Dept spent R30m on legal costs since 2013". Eyewitness News. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  26. ^ a b c Damba-Hendrik, Nombulelo (2016-06-21). "I cry every month for my money, says pensioner". Ground Up. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  27. ^ Maregele, Barbara (2016-03-15). "Social grants: deductions are getting out of hand, says Black Sash". Ground Up. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  28. ^ "SASSA criminal charges against Net1 frozen". Ground Up. 2016-06-29. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  29. ^ Dasnois, Alide (2016-08-15). "R4,000 taken from 89-year-old's pension for a loan he never took out". Ground Up. Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  30. ^ Gonstana, Mary-Anne (2016-09-09). "Mother of three left with R20 a month after illegal deductions from her social grant". Ground Up. Retrieved 2017-05-10.

External links Edit

  • Official website  
  • Information for Sassa Special Relief of Distress (SRD) Grant


south, african, social, security, agency, sassa, national, agency, south, african, government, created, april, 2005, administer, south, africa, social, security, system, including, distributing, social, grants, behalf, department, social, development, under, o. The South African Social Security Agency SASSA is a national agency of the South African government created in April 2005 to administer South Africa s social security system including by distributing social grants on behalf of the Department of Social Development DSD It is under the oversight but not the operational control of DSD and the Ministry of Social Development 1 Established in terms of the Social Assistance Act of 2004 and South African Social Security Agency Act of 2004 SASSA is a public entity in terms of Schedule 3A of the Public Finance Management Act 2 As of 2022 its chief executive officer was Busisiwe Memela Khambula 3 SASSA was founded in 2005 to centralise the provision of social security assistance formerly a primarily provincial function in order to reduce corruption and improve service delivery 4 It was closely modelled on its Australian counterpart Centrelink 4 Its key functions relate to the administration and payment of social grants which support a large proportion of the South African population in 2022 46 of South Africans received a social grant 5 SASSA s functions including processing applications for social security assistance verifying and approving applications disbursing and paying the grants to eligible beneficiaries and preventing and detecting fraud 2 SASSA employs biometric technology including fingerprint and facial recognition to verify the identity of beneficiaries This helps ensure that the grants reach the intended recipients and reduce the risk of identity theft and fraud Contents 1 Types of grants 2 Operation 3 Grants crisis 4 Unauthorised deductions 5 References 6 External linksTypes of grants EditMain article Social welfare programmes in South Africa Social Security Grants The social assistance disbursed by SASSA takes the form of various grants most of them are means tested and paid in cash on a monthly basis These are the Child Support Grant the Care Dependency Grant the Foster Child Grant the Disability Grant the Grant in Aid the Older Person s Grant an old age pension and the War Veteran s Grant 6 A special case is the three month Social Relief of Distress Grant which provides immediate temporary assistance in the form of vouchers food parcels or cash 7 6 The temporary Covid 19 Social Relief of Distress grant was introduced in May 2020 during the Covid 19 pandemic 8 in October 2022 Enoch Godongwana the Minister of Finance announced that it would be extended to remain in place until March 2024 9 10 In 2015 of the R155 3 billion given in social welfare R53 5 billion went to pensioners R47 8 billion to Child Support Grants R20 2 billion to Disability Grants and R8 5 billion for other grants with the remainder spent on management and administration 11 SASSA announced that All Grants would be increased from 1 April 2023 The Older Persons Grant will be increased to R2080 for recipients between 60 and 74 and R2100 for recipients over 75 years old Recipients of the Disability Grant and the Care Dependency Grant will be increased to R2080 while the Child Support Grant will be increased to R500 with the top up increasing to R250 The Foster Child grant will increase to R1120 with the War Veteran grant increasing to R2100 and lastly the Grant In Aid increasing to R500 Further increases will be effected from 1 October 2024 The SRD Grant remains at R350 and is being extended until 31 March 2024 sassa R350 grant is designed to help unemployed South African between the age of 18 59 years with no source of income SASSA aims to eliminate long queues at its local offices across the country so that beneficiaries can have smooth experience when applying for their Social Grants SASSA Internship ProgrammeApplicants interested applying for SASSA Internship Programme should send their applications Fully completed Z83 Identity Document or Smart Card detailed CV and certified copies of Senior certificate and post matric qualification acquired quoting the relevant reference number to the relevant address and position name as per the advert The subject heading of the email should indicate North West Internship Programme name you are applying for Kindly note that other documents e g Certificates ID and Driver s Licence etc should be submitted upon request Operation EditIn January 2012 Cash Paymaster Services CPS a subsidiary of Net1 UEPS Technologies was awarded a five year R10 billion tender to distribute social grants on behalf of SASSA from February 2012 11 12 A rival bidder AllPay challenged the procurement process in court in 2014 the Constitutional Court found that irregular processes had been followed and consequently declared the tender invalid but suspended the order in order not to interrupt grant payments and to allow SASSA an opportunity to initiate a new tender process 13 14 Each month the National Treasury deposits the total amount to be paid out into a Nedbank trust account Interest earned during this period goes to the state All beneficiary accounts are held at Grindrod Bank 11 A grant recipient can withdraw their grant from any SASSA paypoint across the country which carries no withdrawal charge and which Net1 CEO Serge Belamont claims is more secure because of the biometric security checks on fingerprints or from designated retailers such as Pick n Pay which work with EasyPay another company owned by Net1 to allow these withdrawals or from ATMs 11 Moneyline another Net1 company provides loans to grant recipients Umoya Manje also another company owned by Net1 allows grant beneficiaries to buy cellphone airtime on credit 11 Grants crisis EditIn December 2014 a ministerial task team concluded that SASSA itself should take over the paying out of grants 15 In 2015 SASSA issued a new tender but did not award it 11 opting instead to insource the disbursement of grants by 2017 16 In the 2015 2016 financial year SASSA recorded additional irregular expenditure on the CPS contract for the re registration of grant beneficiaries because legal requirements had been circumvented 17 The then Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan advised the Minister of Social Development Bathabile Dlamini to award a new contract to commercial South African banks and the South African Post Office SAPO 16 and forego biometric identification which contract requirement disadvantaged others bidders against CPS However this proposal was rejected on the grounds that the biometric system had eliminated fraudulent claims amounting to R2 billion annually 18 that further work to remove duplicate entries could save another R2 billion annually and that SAPO did not have a banking licence nor enough post offices to properly distribute grants 13 17 Dlamini expressed a desire to remain with CPS until SASSA was capable to take over reasoning that this posed the least risk of SASSA defaulting on grant payments 14 She claimed that the process to distribute grants through SASSA was well underway insisting that the Department was halfway through a four phase plan which would culminate in 2019 with the handing over of the responsibility to SASSA 15 Dlamini claimed in 2017 that she had only become aware in October 2016 that SASSA was likely to be unable to take over grants payments from April 2017 17 SASSA estimated it would pay CPS about R3 5 billion annually under a renewed contract between 52 and 59 more than it already did SASSA later denied that it had done such estimation and then claimed that it was a simple inflation related adjustment which was not true 19 20 Dlamini had been advised in October 2016 that the DSD was obliged to engage in competitive tendering and could therefore not sign a contract with CPS she was informed that the grants crisis was also not a justification to continue using CPS since the emergency had been self created and she also received a legal opinion from senior counsel Wim Trengove that the extant CPS contract could not be legally extended since it had already been ruled invalid by the Constitutional Court 19 In December 2016 SASSA was also advised to inform the Constitutional Court of its predicament that it faced the highly irregular prospect of going into contract for another year with CPS The Agency waited until 28 February 2017 to lodge a plea which it immediately withdrew the next day using a letter dated the previous day 20 In February 2017 SASSA told Parliament s social development portfolio committee it had come up short in attempts to find working solutions to pay social grants and claimed that the only way to make social grant payments from April was to stick with the service provider whose contract had been declared invalid 16 21 SASSA s Zodwa Mvulane told Parliament in March 2017 that they only had a year from September 2015 to prepare for being a paymaster However SASSA only began preparations in December and it had until then been ignored for years While SASSA told Parliament it had not had enough time it had also claimed before the Constitutional Court that it would not need CPS a year after the 2017 2018 financial year contradicting a letter by Dlamini sent on 2 February that stated CPS would no longer be needed at the end of 2019 and another letter sent a week later by SASSA chief executive Thokozani Magwaza which claimed that the contract with CPS would only last until November 2018 both longer than a year 20 The Black Sash Trust through representation by the Centre for Applied Legal Studies launched an application to the Constitutional Court asking it to compel Dlamini and SASSA to take necessary measures to ensure the social grants system and its beneficiaries were protected when the CPS contract ended on 31 March 12 On 6 March 2017 the contract with Cash Paymaster Services was renewed and the Constitutional Court s order of invalidity with regard to that contract again suspended for another year The Court held that no party had any claim to profit from the threatened invasion of people s rights but also understood that CPS could not be expected to deliver grants at a loss it therefore ordered CPS to continue to deliver social grants at the same price it had contracted for in 2012 22 The Constitutional Court found that the responsible functionaries of SASSA had been aware from April 2016 that they could not comply with their undertaking to the Court previously that they would be able to pay social grants from 1 April 2017 22 The Constitutional Court held Dlamini primarily responsible for the crisis 23 with Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng saying there was no explanation for the incompetence displayed by her and SASSA 24 According to constitutional scholar Pierre de Vos the Constitutional Court had concluded that SASSA and Dlamini could not be trusted to do their constitutionally mandated job to ensure delivery of social grants and could not be trusted not to lie to the courts in the future 22 Between 2013 and 2017 the DSD spent R30 million on the costs of legal appeals involving SASSA 25 Unauthorised deductions EditIn 2004 the DSD amended the Social Assistance Act in order to disallow anyone other than the beneficiary to deduct money from their account 12 17 However 10 262 complaints about deductions were made between April 2015 and March 2016 and the DSD itself claimed for the past two to three years to have been fighting illegal deductions from social grants 26 Many of the unauthorised deductions were claimed by CPS to be repayment of non existent Moneyline loans 1 27 and sales of airtime and electricity 26 In June 2016 SASSA the Black Sash and the Association of Community Advice Office ACAOSA laid criminal charges against the directors of CPS and Grindrod Bank claiming that the two companies were not implementing amended regulations under the Social Assistance Act which amendments compelled companies not to deduct money from social grant beneficiary accounts for financial services 26 The criminal charges were frozen until October when Net1 was to receive clarity from a High Court as to regulations 28 In a founding affidavit lodged with the North Gauteng High Court Black Sash asked the court to ring fence social grant accounts in order to protect grant beneficiaries from exploitation or abuse and to prevent companies from soliciting beneficiaries around SASSA paypoints 29 practices which Black Sash and the DSD accused Net1 and its subsidiaries of encouraging 30 References Edit a b Maregele Barbara 2016 03 07 Sassa shows contempt for poor Social Development Ground Up Retrieved 2017 05 10 a b Public entities and statutory bodies Department of Social Development 2008 09 25 Retrieved 2017 05 09 Chief Executive Officer SASSA Retrieved 2022 12 15 a b Reddy Trusha 2008 Corruption and Social Grants in South Africa Institute for Security Studies pp 47 54 ISBN 978 1 920114 54 1 Human By Liezl 2022 02 23 Finance Minister announces 2022 social grant increases GroundUp News Retrieved 2022 12 15 a b Everything you need to know about social grants GroundUp News 2022 Retrieved 2022 12 15 SASSA Status Check Sassa Check 2023 09 07 Retrieved 2023 02 07 Kohler Tim Bhorat Haroon 2020 11 20 Lockdown economics in South Africa Social assistance and the Ramaphosa stimulus package Brookings Retrieved 2022 12 15 Truth about Sassa SRD r350 Grant Extension until March 2024 SRD Status 2023 10 03 Retrieved 2023 10 03 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Magubane Khulekani 2 October 2022 SRD grant extended for another year but solution must be found says Godongwana News24 Retrieved 2022 12 15 a b c d e f Spotlight on social grants How the system works Ground Up 2015 10 07 Retrieved 2017 05 10 a b c Mzekandaba Simnikiwe 2017 03 01 SASSA fails to get affairs in order ITWeb Technology News Retrieved 2017 05 07 a b Gallens Mahlatse 2017 02 16 Dlamini rejects Gordhan s social grants proposal News24 Retrieved 2017 05 06 a b Minister amp SASSA on readiness to implement Constitutional Court ruling Parliamentary Monitoring Group 2017 02 22 a b Sassa changes its tune No deal yet with CPS The Citizen 2017 03 05 Retrieved 2017 05 07 a b c Mzekandaba Simnikiwe 2017 02 17 Social grants conundrum continues ITWeb Technology News Retrieved 2017 05 06 a b c d October Alicestine 2017 03 09 10 things to note about the Sassa crisis CityPress Retrieved 2017 05 06 Ndaba Baldwin 2015 02 15 Gordhan Dlamini square off on grants issue Independent Online Retrieved 2017 05 06 a b Wet Phillip de 2014 03 05 Minister Dlamini Sassa crisis That s a media invention The M amp G Online Retrieved 2017 05 08 a b c Wet Phillip de 2017 03 03 A litany of lies Sassa s greatest hits The M amp G Online Retrieved 2017 05 08 Sassa faces yet another glitch eNCA 2017 02 01 Retrieved 2017 05 06 a b c de Vos Pierre 2017 03 17 Sassa grant crisis In this game of thrones can Social Development Minister Bathabile Dlamini survive The Daily Maverick Retrieved 2017 05 08 Quintal Genevieve 2017 03 17 Dlamini responsible for social grants crisis says Constitutional Court Business Day Live Archived from the original on 2017 03 17 Retrieved 2017 05 09 Chabalala Jeanette Raborife Mpho 2017 03 15 No explanation for Sassa Dlamini s incompetence Mogoeng News24 Retrieved 2017 05 09 Dentlinger Lindsay 2017 04 13 Social Development Dept spent R30m on legal costs since 2013 Eyewitness News Retrieved 2017 05 03 a b c Damba Hendrik Nombulelo 2016 06 21 I cry every month for my money says pensioner Ground Up Retrieved 2017 05 10 Maregele Barbara 2016 03 15 Social grants deductions are getting out of hand says Black Sash Ground Up Retrieved 2017 05 10 SASSA criminal charges against Net1 frozen Ground Up 2016 06 29 Retrieved 2017 05 10 Dasnois Alide 2016 08 15 R4 000 taken from 89 year old s pension for a loan he never took out Ground Up Retrieved 2017 05 10 Gonstana Mary Anne 2016 09 09 Mother of three left with R20 a month after illegal deductions from her social grant Ground Up Retrieved 2017 05 10 External links EditOfficial website nbsp Information for Sassa Special Relief of Distress SRD Grant Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title South African Social Security Agency amp oldid 1180466898, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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