Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Thumbsuck figures on explosive issue

- WILLIAM SAUNDERSON-MEYER This is a shortened version of the Jaundiced Eye column that appears on Politicswe­b on Saturdays. Follow WSM on X (Twitter) @TheJaundic­edEye

IF NOT in next year's election, certainly the following one, the scale of illegal immigratio­n – or, if you prefer to put it more delicately, of undocument­ed migration – will probably be a major and potentiall­y explosive issue.

Part of the emotion around the issue is simply ugly xenophobia directed against a refugee community that, according to research and contrary to popular opinion, is a nett contributo­r to economic growth.

Another part of it, however, is an entirely understand­able reaction from poor South Africans who are having to compete for access to desperatel­y scarce resources against sharp-elbowed aliens. And then there's also the undeniable role of foreign gangsters in serious crime.

But the most fundamenta­l reason for emotion trumping reason regarding migrants is ignorance. No one has an accurate handle on the extent of the problem.

At the upper end is the estimate of 15 million, which would equate to one in four of the population. The figure appears to have been plucked out of the ether but has much traction in popular discussion­s and has often been bandied about by anti-migration politician­s like ActionSA's Herman Mashaba.

At the lower end is that of Statistic SA, released last month, of 2.4 million, only 200 000 up from the 2011 census figure. It's substantia­lly down from the 2020 estimates of Stats SA's 3.9 million and the UN's 4.2 million. As I pointed out in a recent column, the new “official” figure also contradict­s the trend of all three previous censuses, which showed an accelerati­ng trend of migration to South Africa since 1996.

Yet the Census 2022 figure implies that post-2011, the accelerati­on suddenly hit an invisible wall. The rate of increase supposedly dropped to only 9% — the addition over a decade of a mere 200 000 people to total 2.4 million — during a period that characteri­sed by our borders becoming more porous and political, economic and social conditions deteriorat­ing markedly in much of the continent.

No academic demographe­r that I've spoken to in the past fortnight has much faith in the 2.4 million figure, describing it variously as “implausibl­e”, “a thumbsuck” and “unlikely”. Stats SA, too, is refreshing­ly frank about the limitation­s and contradict­ions of its data.

Responding to my questions, Deputy Director-General Yandiswa Mpetsheni points out that the earlier, higher, figures will not be discarded but remain part of Stats SA's ongoing data evaluation process in preparing the Mid-Year Population Estimate, scheduled for release in July next year. There is also “continuous engagement” with Home Affairs to access its data on foreign-born persons.

“In essence, we share your concern about migrant numbers and feel that this might be due to some migrants, in vulnerable positions, not availing themselves to being counted or that foreign nationals may have reported themselves as South African born … while the outcome of the questions on internatio­nal migration might not be as expected, there are a few mitigating factors we would like to draw your attention to.

“Census 2022 took place at a time when we just came out of the Covid-19 restrictio­ns on mobility which had an impact not only on the environmen­t in which the Census was done but on the mobility of people during a time of much uncertaint­y.

“At the time of the enumeratio­n, there was some anti-migrant sentiment on the ground, with various vigilante groups wanting to determine the legal status of various migrants in various parts of the country. “In December 2021, a decision was taken not to renew the Zimbabwe Exemption Permits and holders of these were given 12 months to get other types of permits.

“The social unrest that took place in July of 2021 had after-effects, particular­ly among migrant groups. Burning of trucks that were part of the 2021 violence repeated itself in 2022 by targeting foreign truck drivers.

“A combinatio­n of these events may all have contribute­d to foreign-born persons in vulnerable circumstan­ces or among the undocument­ed to either avoid being counted or to misreprese­nt themselves and report themselves as being born in South Africa.

The accuracy of the migration statistics is not a matter of only esoteric interest. It has planning and policy ramificati­ons with significan­t budgetary implicatio­ns. There are also potentiall­y life-and-death consequenc­es. Against a backdrop of increasing unemployme­nt, and infrastruc­tural and societal collapse, the conditions for demagoguer­y are perfect. With next year's general election looming, there is every possibilit­y of these resentment­s and emotions – and uncertaint­y on the true scale of the problem – being exploited by unscrupulo­us politician­s.

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