Title: Black Sash
1Black Sash
- Submission to Social Development Portfolio Public
Hearings on the Taylor Report - 9 June 2003
2(No Transcript)
3Black Sash
- Human rights based NGO since 1955
- Access to justice through 7 paralegal advice
offices - Cases on the ground inform our advocacy work
- Underlying problem that presents rooted in
poverty, which undermines dignity. Economic
marginalisation leads to social marginalisation. - Emphasis on access to social assistance and
social security work due to delays in accessing
grants - 10 963 of 24 786 cases last year on social grants
- (44.2) followed by labour (dismissals) 18.3
4Beginning of reform to comprehensive social
security policy
- 1997 Welfare White Paper
- There will be universal access to an intergrated
and sustainable social security system. Every
South African should have a minimum income,
sufficient to meet basic subsistence needs
51998 Presidential Jobs Summit
- parties to the Jobs Summit commit themselves
to implementing a comprehensive social security
system aimed especially at those living in
poverty and the unemployed. A basic income grant
may be considered part of such a system. The
process to reach agreement on the elements of
such a system should begin with an
investigation.
6Committee of Inquiry into a Comprehensive Social
Security
- Investigation to begin the process to reach
agreement on implementing comprehensive social
security system - Terms of reference
- Options on ultimate objectives and targets for
the social security system - Options for immediate practical implementation
- Viability and implications of options considered
- Released report May 2002
- Should be seen as a thinking document, should
feed into transparent consultative policy making
process, with draft white paper published for
comment.
7Black Sash submissions to Taylor Committee on
Social Security Reform
- Comprehensive social assistance for children,
including children affected/ infected with
HIV/AIDS - Social Security in South Africa
- Unemployment Insurance
- Disability
- Basic Income (Citizens) Grant
- Unconstitutional aspects of the Social Assistance
Act
8Constitutional Imperatives guiding development of
policy for social security
- Section 7(1)
- This bill of rights is a cornerstone of
democracy in South Africa. It enshrines the
rights of all people in our country and affirms
the democratic values of human dignity, equality
and freedom
9Section 7(2)
- The state must respect, promote and fulfill the
rights in the Bill of Rights - State cannot erode exisiting rights
- State must protect rights from erosion by third
parties - State has a positive duty to deliver in terms of
the rights contained in the bill of rights - All rights, including socio-economic rights are
justiciable. Constitution is tool for social
transformation
10Section 27(1)(c) and (2)
- Everyone has the right to have access to social
security, including if they are unable to support
themselves and their dependants, appropriate
social assistance. - The state must take reasonable legislative and
other measures, within its available resources,
to achieve the progressive realisation of each of
these rights.
11Progressive realisation within available resources
- Set out in the Grootboom judgement
- State must design, implement and constantly
review a reasonable policy to realise the right
of access to social assistance - Work within available resources
- Even if state can show statistical success, a
policy will not pass test of reasonableness if it
fails to address the needs of the most vulnerable
12Current Poverty (Taylor findings)
- 22 million people - 53 of the population -live
on average on less than R144 per month - 2 in 3 children live in poverty
- 25 of children under 5 have severe to moderate
stunting - 10 of Africans are malnourished
- 3.1 million workerless African households (1999)
up from 1.9 million in 1995 - Long term structural unemployment
- One of the most unequal societies in the world
13Current Take up of grantsMarch 2003
Old Age Pension 2 000 041
Disability 897 050
Grant in aid 12 279
Foster Care 133 309
Care Dependency Grant 56 150
Child Support Grant 2 513 693
Total 5 617 151
14Gaps in current provisioning
- No income support for poor children between 7-18
years - No income support for poor adults between 18-59
years - No general assistance for poor households where
no-one is employed - Over 13 million people live below the poverty
line (the very poor) with no access to social
security
15Taylor findings on adequacy of current social
security provisioning
- Lack of policy to address income poverty has been
a constraining feature of South Africas
socio-economic programmes - The gaps in social security leave the state open
to constitutional challenges - The committee therefore recommends that an
appropriate social security concept for South
Africa must prioritise the needs of people
without any incomes, with insufficient incomes
and those who are engaged in informal activities
16Taylor recommendations of Comprehensive Social
Protection
- Preventative interventions
- Developmental paradigm
- Empower the poor and socially excluded to move
towards sustainable livelihoods
17Elements of Comprehensive Social Protection
- Income poverty - BIG, SOAP, extended CSG
- Capability poverty - Health care, education,
water and sanitation, electricity, public
transport, housing, jobs and skills training - Asset poverty Land, credit and community
infrastructure - Special needs - Reformed disability, foster care,
CDG - Social insurance
18Income Poverty Basic Income Grant
- Recommended by Taylor Committee as the substratum
to comprehensive social protection - Effective direct payment provides immediate
relief (Budget 2002) - Empowers the poor by providing springboard to
move beyond confines of destitution
19Cont.
- Universal, non means tested grant
- Taylor report found that the poorest decile fail
to receive social assistance currently (which
fails constitutional imperative to provide for
most vulnerable) - Universal entitlement target assistance through
recovery of value of tax PROGRESSIVELY through
the tax system
20Taylor Recommendations on Special Needs
- Need to distinguish between poverty alleviation
and special needs - Disabled need for uniform, needs -based
assessment tool, taking into account
socio-environmental needs of persons - HIV/AIDS committee did not address issues of
earlier intervention through state assistance to
sustain healthy people keep people employable
and reduce number of orphans
21Financing of CSP
- Taylor Committee found it was affordable
- sufficient fiscal capacity for improved social
spending without adverse macro-economic impact - R62 billion per year been given back in tax cuts
to income earners since 1995 - Number of options for progressive financing
financing policy is a political choice
22Administration
- Dove tailed system based on the HANIS smart card
- Financial Institutions 2002 Financial Sector
Summit commitment to find inter alia, affordable
delivery/ payment mechanisms e.g. co-operative
banks - Post Bank
- Multi purpose Community Centres
- Informal points of sale terminals
23Single Delivery Agency
- Committee recommends introduction of a single
social security agency to administer all social
security - We do not believe this will solve problems of
delivery by itself - Way forward Set aside the assignment of the
administration of Social Assistance Act to
promote nationally enforceable norms and
standards delegate necessary functions to
provinces then review principle of single agency
for broad social security, not just social
assistance
24Conclusion
- Comprehensive approach of the Committee is
developmental, aiming to move people away from
dependecy on income poverty initiatives to
sustainable livelihoods - Need to address immediate needs caused by poverty
while implementing initiatives that lead to self
sufficiency asset poverty skills deficit jobs
creation
257 June 2003 Growth and Development Summit
- Recognition of role of social security measures
to fight poverty - All parties commit to address take up and
overcome obstacles to accessing current grants - Discuss extension of social protection framework
26- Government in process of finalising policy on
comprehensive framework for social protection. - Welcome announcement need for coherent policy
- Policy should be published in draft form for
public comment - Parliament should encourage executive to do so to
facilitate oversight of passage of legislation to
implement policy.