Title: Expanded Public Works Programme Current Status
1Expanded Public Works ProgrammeCurrent Status
PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC WORKS SEPT
2009 Period (1 April 2009 30 June 2009)
2The Employment Challenge
- SA has a severe unemployment and poverty
challenge - Approx ¼ of labour force unemployed
- Approx 40 of population below the poverty line
- High rates of working poverty low pay
relative to cost of living means that finding a
job does not necessarily pull a family out of
poverty. - Govt has adopted targets to halve unemployment
and poverty between 2004 2014. This can be
seen as interim target only.
3The Recent Employment Experience
- Formal employment began growing from 1997, at a
health pace relative to GDP growth. - Unemployment fell from 28 in 2004 to 23 in
2008. - The formal economy needs to generate an average
500,000 net new jobs annually to halve
unemployment. This was achieved in recent years
not to be confused with EPWP Work Opportunities. - The impact of the global economic crisis,
combined with electricity rationing and until
recently rising interest rates, reduced the rate
of employment growth. Employment and unemployment
did not change from Q1 2008 to Q1 2009.
4Goal of EPWP Phase 2
- To create Equivalent 4, 5 million work
opportunities in 5 years (i.e. 2 million Full
Time Equivalent - FTEs) for poor and unemployed
people in South Africa so as to contribute to
halving unemployment by 2014, through the
delivery of public and community services. - (Scale up from 210 000 FTEs in Y1 to 610 000 FTEs
in Y5 - Equivalent 4, 5 million 100-day work
opportunities in 5 years ) - The expanded public works programme (EPWP) is an
important part of governments capacity to
provide employment to those who are not absorbed
into the labour market (from FRAMEWORK FOR SOUTH
AFRICAS RESPONSE TO THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC
CRISIS, p. 16)
4
5The Meaning of Decent Work
Paraphrased from ILO website
- There is a high probability of earning sufficient
income, whether through one job or multiple
economic opportunities. The economy increasingly
generates employment with a bias towards the
creation of decent work opportunities and
sustainable livelihoods DoL currently amending
Ministerial Determination re employment
conditions. Current minimum between R50 and R100.
- The majority of working people can achieve a
sustainable and acceptable standard of living
through the combination of earnings from work,
private entitlements, and social protection. - Human rights are respected in the process. This
requires freedom for people to express their
concerns, organize and participate in the
decisions that affect their lives
6EPWP Phase 2 Sectors
- Infrastructure Sector aims to create work
opportunities through the use of labour-intensive
methods during the construction and maintenance
of Public funded projects - Environment and Culture Sector aims to create
work opportunities in public funded environmental
programmes. Sector has also significant potential
to keep expanding both its existing programmes
and create new programmes that would provide
environment-related services - Social Sector aims to create work opportunities
through the provision of social services. Sector
is estimated to have the largest potential for
expansion over the next five years - Non-State Sector aims to create work
opportunities through Non-Governmental
Organisations, Community-Based Organisations and
other Not-for-Profit Organisations (NPOs) - The role of communities in developing their own
local employment schemes and the role of NGOs,
trade unions and CBOs in offering advice on
priorities and in administering resources for and
in running them will be promoted through
Community Work Programmes (from FRAMEWORK FOR
SOUTH AFRICAS RESPONSE TO THE INTERNATIONAL
ECONOMIC CRISIS, pp. 16-17)
75 Year Work Opportunities Targets
Infrastructure Environmental Social Non-State Total
2009-2010 300,000 150,000 80,000 20,000 550,000
2010-2011 342,000 156,000 96,000 48,000 642,000
2011-2012 440,000 200,000 132,000 96,000 868,000
2012-2013 572,000 275,000 187,000 176,000 1,210,000
2013-2014 720,000 375,000 255,000 300,000 1,650,000
Total 2,374,000 1,156,000 750,000 640,000 4,920,000
8Key Characteristics of EPWP Projects
- They are highly labour intensive a large
percentage of the overall project costs are paid
out in wages to the target group - They employ large numbers of the EPWP target
group - The EPWP target group is paid wages between R50
and R100 per day. - The EPWP target group is employed under the
Special Public Works Programme conditions of work - Vulnerable group targets 55 women 40 youth
and 2 people with disabilities
9Funding of EPWP Programmes
- Funds for EPWP programmes are within the
allocated budgets of national departments,
provinces and municipalities through the normal
budgeting process - Over and above these budgets, those public bodies
that are performing well will be able to access
additional funds through the EPWP wage incentive,
for which R 4.1 billion has been made available
over the MTEF
10Incentive Grant
- Over the MTEF, two incentive or performance-based
conditional grants as well as an allocation for
non-state sector participant employer
organisations have been created on Public Works
vote - EPWP Incentive Grant provincial Infrastructure
Sector departments will provide - R151.419 million in 2009/10
- R400 million in 2010/11
- R800 million in 2011/12
- EPWP Incentive Grant to municipalities will
provide - R201.748 million in 2009/10
- R554 million in 2010/11
- R1.108 billion in 2011/12
- EPWP Incentive Grant allocation to Non-State
Sector (primarily for paying wages to EPWP
workers) - R80.5 million in 2009/10
- R359.621 million in 2010/1
- R308.740 million 2011/12
11Dec 2009 Target
- Programme expected to create 500 000 work
opportunities between March 2009/10 and December
2009/10. - All public bodies from all spheres of government
(i.e. national and provincial departments, as
well as municipalities) and the Non-State Sector
(supported by government incentives), required to
deliberately optimise creation of
labour-intensive work opportunities for
unemployed and poor people through delivery of
public and community services - Public bodies should create work opportunities in
terms of their normal mandates and budgets, e.g.
according to allocations as per the Estimates of
National Expenditure and grants falling under the
Division of Revenue Act - Training and enterprise development will be
implemented in sector specific programmes to
enhance service delivery, beneficiary well-being
and skills development.
12First Quarter Results 1
- Period April to June 2009 (see Annexures A-E)
indicate that more than 83 900 work opportunities
have thus far been reported - Figure is very conservative and reflects
- poor reporting
- under-reporting
- in some cases no reporting on active projects
across all three spheres of government.
13Progress against 2009-2010 targets Overall EPWP
Sector Targeted work opportunities WO Work opportunities WO delivered to date 1 Ap 09 30 June 09 Work opportunities WO delivered to date 1 Ap 09 30 June 09 Work opportunities WO delivered to date 1 Ap 09 30 June 09 Work opportunities WO delivered to date 1 Ap 09 30 June 09
Sector Targeted work opportunities WO Gross Gross Net Net
Sector Targeted work opportunities WO No of targeted WO No of targeted WO
Infrastructure 300 000 59,579 20 59,579 20
Environment 150 000 13,960 9 13,960 9
Social 80 000 7,466 9 7,466 9
Non-state 20 000 2,909 15 2,909 15
Total 550 000 83,914 15 83,914 15
Source Targets Business Plan (dated January 2009) Gross Work Opportunities overall number of work opportunities that the reporting body reported on Net Work Opportunities calculated by subtracting the possible work opportunities if the projects were implemented machine intensively from the Gross Work Opportunities only applies in Infrastructure Sector 0 TOTAL Figures adjusted by the EPWP Unit to account for projects that are implemented across financial years Source Targets Business Plan (dated January 2009) Gross Work Opportunities overall number of work opportunities that the reporting body reported on Net Work Opportunities calculated by subtracting the possible work opportunities if the projects were implemented machine intensively from the Gross Work Opportunities only applies in Infrastructure Sector 0 TOTAL Figures adjusted by the EPWP Unit to account for projects that are implemented across financial years Source Targets Business Plan (dated January 2009) Gross Work Opportunities overall number of work opportunities that the reporting body reported on Net Work Opportunities calculated by subtracting the possible work opportunities if the projects were implemented machine intensively from the Gross Work Opportunities only applies in Infrastructure Sector 0 TOTAL Figures adjusted by the EPWP Unit to account for projects that are implemented across financial years Source Targets Business Plan (dated January 2009) Gross Work Opportunities overall number of work opportunities that the reporting body reported on Net Work Opportunities calculated by subtracting the possible work opportunities if the projects were implemented machine intensively from the Gross Work Opportunities only applies in Infrastructure Sector 0 TOTAL Figures adjusted by the EPWP Unit to account for projects that are implemented across financial years Source Targets Business Plan (dated January 2009) Gross Work Opportunities overall number of work opportunities that the reporting body reported on Net Work Opportunities calculated by subtracting the possible work opportunities if the projects were implemented machine intensively from the Gross Work Opportunities only applies in Infrastructure Sector 0 TOTAL Figures adjusted by the EPWP Unit to account for projects that are implemented across financial years Source Targets Business Plan (dated January 2009) Gross Work Opportunities overall number of work opportunities that the reporting body reported on Net Work Opportunities calculated by subtracting the possible work opportunities if the projects were implemented machine intensively from the Gross Work Opportunities only applies in Infrastructure Sector 0 TOTAL Figures adjusted by the EPWP Unit to account for projects that are implemented across financial years
- Net jobs for Q2 was as follows
- Infra 34
- Env 86
- Social17
- Econ 54
14NET jobs per sector against total target for
2009-10 (1 Apr 2009 30 June 2009)
15Job opportunities per sector and province
(Overall) (1 April 30 June 2009)
Province Environment Culture Infrastructure Non-state Social TOTAL
EC 851 12,834 1,070 420 15,175
FS 799 930 Â 2,283 4,012
GP 2,651 6,874 1,121 3,324 13,970
KZN 2,034 32,384 100 Â 34,518
LP 823 852 101 113 1,889
MP 481 1,819 166 Â 2,466
NC 141 580 Â 1,041 1,762
NW 1,120 1,132 351 Â 2,603
WC 2,333 2,174 Â 285 4,792
TOTAL 11,233 59,579 2,909 7,466 81,187
16Full Time Equivalent performance Provincial Gov
Dept (1 April 30 June 2009)
Provincial Gov Dept 2009-10 ELIGIBILITY THRESHOLD Q1 (April - June 2009) THRESHOLD Q1 ACTUAL FTE PERFORMANCE Q1 performance
TOTAL 31,434 7,859 5,812 74
KwaZulu-Natal 6,791 1,698 2,913 172
Western Cape 2,003 501 423 84
Gauteng 2,594 648 846 130
Eastern Cape 5,836 1,459 1,167 80
Mpumalanga 2,760 690 161 23
Free State 2,407 602 22 4
Limpopo 5,208 1,302 172 13
North West 2,731 683 71 10
Northern Cape 1,103 276 37 13
17Full Time Equivalent performance Provincial Gov
Dept (1 April 30 June 2009)
18Full Time Equivalent performance
Municipalities (1 April 30 June 2009)
Municipalities 2009-10 ELIGIBILITY THRESHOLD Q1 (April - June 2009) THRESHOLD Q1 ACTUAL FTE PERFORMANCE Q1 performance
TOTAL 15,747 3,937 1,688 43
Eastern Cape 1,927 482 209 43
Free State 871 218 32 15
Gauteng 7,390 1,847 534 29
KwaZulu-Natal 3,593 898 719 80
Limpopo 0 0 25
Mpumalanga 0 0 59
Northern Cape 0 0 0
North West 0 0 110
TOTAL 15,747 3,937 0
19Full Time Equivalent performance
Municipalities (1 April 30 June 2009)
20Actions Taken to Ensure Delivery
- Minister engaged and signed protocols that
confirm 500 000 December 2009 targets, as well as
five year targets for provinces and
municipalities, with Premiers and MECs of 7 out
of 9 provinces - DPW technical teams give support to provinces and
municipalities to ensure that creation of work
opportunities is prioritised in design and
implementation of projects across government