2 research outputs found
The experience of cash transfers in alleviating childhood poverty in South Africa: Mothers’ experiences of the Child Support Grant
Cash transfer (CT) programmes are increasingly being used as policy instruments to
address child poverty and child health outcomes in developing countries. As the
largest cash-transfer programme in Africa, the South African Child Support Grant
(CSG) provides an important opportunity to further understand how a CT of its kind
works in a developing country context. We explored the experiences and views of
CSG recipients and non-recipients from four diverse settings in South Africa. Four
major themes emerged from the data: barriers to accessing the CSG; how the CSG is
utilised and the ways in which it makes a difference; the mechanisms for
supplementing the CSG; and the impact of not receiving the grant. Findings show
that administrative factors continue to be the greatest barrier to CSG receipt, pointing
to the need for further improvements in managing queues, waiting times and
coordination between departments for applicants trying to submit their applications.
Many recipients, especially those where the grant was the only source of income,
acknowledged the importance of the CSG, while also emphasising its inadequacy. To
maximise their impact, CT programmes such as the CSG need to be fully funded and
form part of a broader basket of poverty alleviation strategies
Chronic and structural poverty in South Africa: Challenges for action and research
Ten years after liberation, the persistence of poverty is one of the most important and urgent problems facing South Africa. This paper reflects on some of the findings based on research undertaken as part of the participation of the Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies (PLAAS) at the University of the Western Cape in the work of the Chronic Poverty Research Centre (CPRC), situates it within the broader literature on poverty in South Africa, and considers some emergent challenges. Although PLAAS’s survey, being only the first wave of a panel study, does not yet cast light on short term poverty dynamics, it illuminates key aspects of the structural conditions that underpin long-term poverty: the close interactions between asset poverty, employment-vulnerability and subjection to unequal social power relations. Coming to grips with these dynamics requires going beyond the limitations of conventional ‘sustainable livelihoods’ analyses; and functionalist analyses of South African labour markets. The paper argues for a re-engagement with the traditions of critical sociology, anthropology and the theoretical conventions that allow a closer exploration of the political economy of chronic poverty at micro and macro level