Title: Welfare and Work in South Africa
1Welfare and Work in South Africa
- Rebecca Surender
- University of Oxford
2The SA Social Security System
- The main source of cash transfers in SA is the
social assistance (social grants system) - One of the most comprehensive in the Developing
world with grants for disabled people (Disability
Grant), children with poor carers (Child Support
Grant), older people (old age grant), disabled
children (Care Dependency Grant), and fostered
children (Foster Child Grant) - By mid 2008 almost 13 million grants were being
paid - Covering over 28 of the population
- Amounting to 3.5 of GDP
3The SA Social Security System
- However, for those able bodied people of working
age who are not in work, there is no social
assistance support - The main provision for the unemployed is the
Unemployment Insurance Fund (UIF) which provides
only very limited cover and only to those who
have recently been in work
4Dependency Culture Thesis
- The dependency culture thesis (in simplified
form) argues that there is the emergence of
communities where the adults have little or no
attachment to the labour market, where paid work
is not valued and where individuals are content,
in the long term, to derive their income from
state transfers (Murray 1984, Murray 1996, Mead
1992) - A culture of dependency emerges and this is
transmitted inter-generationally to children who
see no working role models and so inherit this
tendency to dependency - The individuals exhibiting the dependency culture
become cut off from mainstream values and so are
said to be a moral underclass - Welfare and social assistance are thus seen as
a dis-benefit
5Our Study
- Our Study examines
- The nature and strength of attachment to the
labour market amongst grant recipients - The opportunities and barriers to employment they
face - Whether there is evidence of a culture of
dependency among grant recipients
6Methodology
- 2 components conducted between 2006 - 2008
- a survey to compare the attitudes of those in and
outside the formal labour Market. Developed
module included in the HSRCs South African Social
Attitudes Survey (a cross-sectional nationally
representative sample) 2,939 respondents. - a qualitative study consisting of 39 focus groups
across the Western Cape and Eastern Cape
provinces - 386 interviewees - We focused on 2 grants the CSG and the DG
because - They are the main grants available to those of
working age - Theyve each been the subject of similar recent
debates about perverse incentives
7Employment and Unemployment in South Africa
- In September 2007, unemployment in South Africa
(using the official definition) stood at 23
(Stats SA 2007) - If we include discouraged workers the figure is
estimated at between 36 and 41 - Labour market participation (absorption) rate was
42.7 (employed people as a percentage of working
age people) BUT this includes informal sector and
(very) part time work
8Have people grown accustomed to unemployment?
9Valuing Work
10Valuing Work
- There are no jobs. You can have R200 in hand,
you go up and down using it for transport looking
for work until the moneys finished. Still no
job. You sacrifice buying even food in the
house, save the R200 to look for work. There are
not jobs, no domestic work, no factory work
(Female, CSG, Mdantsane) - We dont know what to do, but we know we will
do anything if they give us a chancewe are all
starving here and we are desperate (Male, DG,
Mncotsho)
11Job seeking and Barriers to Employment
- 81 of unemployed survey respondents were looking
for work - 90 of employed survey respondents would
immediately look for work if they lost their job - 81 of Black African unemployed respondents
willing to move to find work - 80 of Black African respondents willing to get
training if they became unemployed
12Barriers to Finding work
- No jobs!
- Not enough qualifications or experience
- Transport costs
- Employment agencies
- Social networks
13No means of affordable transport
- We have to use public transport which costs
money and leaving children behind so it is
difficult for us to hear if there is a factory
offering jobs in Parow (Female, CSG, Crossroads)
- Â
- The money that you use for transport makes a
significant impact on the grant itself. Sometimes
when you do not get a job you feel that you have
wasted the moneythat is why most people end up
sitting instead of going and look for jobs
(Male CSG, Crossroads) - Â
- The taxi fare is R20 every dayyou would end up
working only for the taxi fare (Female, CSG,
Mncotsho Village )
14Moving to find Work
15Moving for Work
- At least here you can find some things on the
road some scrap metals and other things which
you can sell. There is nothing back home (Male,
DG, Makhaza). - Â It is better here because there are more people
who can buy your fruits and veg or sweets or
whatever you may havethere, you can sit and no
one will pass your stall for hours (Female, CSG,
Khayelitsha) - Â
- BUT .
- It made sense before, but now there are no jobs
anywhereit is the same here as back there
(Male, CSG, Old Crossroads)
16Not worth working?
17Should the unemployed receive social assistance?
18Do grants discourage people from working?
19Do people receiving grants need the help?
20More spend on social grants?
21Grants for the Unemployed?
- I think that government should introduce a grant
for people who dont have jobs so hunger amongst
people would cease(Female, CSG, Langa). - Â
- The government must support those people who are
not working so that they can be able to buy
foodsince they are hungry they must it get it
(Male, DG, Khayelitsha). - Â
- We are desperatewe need it (Female, CSG,
Mncotsho).
22Grants for the Unemployed?
- People say that once you get money you relax
but I dont agree with that. That money makes you
want more it will encourage people to look for
jobs, even open a small business(Male, CSG, Old
Crossroads). - I think that would be a right thing to do
because the reason why we have so much crime is
because people are not working at least people
will be able to buy foodpeople do bad things not
that they want to buy drugs, but because they are
starving (Male, DG, Makhaza). - Â
- It will be a right thing because it will stop
this cruelty. We dont get along with each other
because of starvation. People are jealous of one
another. If they see you with Shoprite groceries
because you have got your CSG, people become very
jealousI think a grant for everyone is good
because it brings back love to the people since
everyone gets something (Female, CSG, Makhaza).
23Grants not a disincentive
- Theres no way you wont want to work in order
to live on R190 a month. When you work, you earn
more than that. Yes we are hungry, we are used to
poverty, but theres no way you wont work only
to depend on R190. By the time the R190 comes,
your child needs a multitude of things from milk
to shoes. You buy shoes and other small things,
after that its finished (Female CSG,
Mdantsane). - Â
- There is no one who can refuse a job just
because she gets the child support grant
because the money is very little. Like for
instance some people here have said they only get
a grant for one child, how would that be
comparable to a salary if you were to get a job
it is nothing (Female CSG, Makhaza).
24Grants not a disincentive
- I really dont think that a person can be lazy
just because they receive a grant I really dont
think anyone could not look for a job only
because they receive the CSGthe people that say
these things cannot know how we are suffering
(Male CSG, Mdantsane) - Â
- A grant my sister is a last resort. After you
have tried all avenues. So its not gonna change
once you start getting a grant. The reality is
that there are no jobs. So people get
discouraged, because they have no where else to
look, they decide to sit down and rely on this
grant. (Male CSG, East London) - Â
25Conclusion
- False dichotomy to place social grants and paid
work in opposition to each other - Both those in or out of work placed a high value
on paid work - All agreed that paid work conferred dignity,
personal satisfaction and social integration - The unemployed were extremely motivated to get
work - The unemployed hadnt got used to the idea that
being out of work was normal - High level of work commitment demonstrate by wide
scale levels of economic migration
26Conclusion
- Grant recipients did not subscribe to a distinct
dependency culture but to the same values,
beliefs and aspirations as others - It is not the motivational characteristics of the
unemployed or the arrangements of the grant
system that account for their unemployment or
grant status but structural economic conditions
- Overwhelming support for a grant for the
unemployed majority in favour even if it means
higher taxes - Unemployed people deserve and desperately need
help