Gulf Today

South African social security at a crossroads

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South Africa’s African National Congress (ANC), fighting to extend its 30-year grip on power in elections this month, would like to cast the government programmes that support Dalene Raiters and her family as a success story. But the 48-year-old doesn’t see it that way.

“The ANC, I don’t want to even talk to them,” an angry Raiters says from the single room in Johannesbu­rg she shares with her sons and grandson. “(Nelson) Mandela’s dream is not their dream.”

With record unemployme­nt and a moribund economy hitting support among voters, the ANC is touting South Africa’s welfare system — a developing world rarity — as a landmark achievemen­t. “These grants and subsidies do much more than give people what they need to live,” President Cyril Ramaphosa said in February. “They are an investment in the future.”

But the growing number of people requiring assistance – over 24 million this year, against a tax base of just 7.1 million – is straining the system. Its future could depend on who in a field that includes two dominant parties espousing vastly divergent political visions — the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) or Democratic Alliance — the ANC chooses as a coalition partner if it loses its majority, as polls suggest, according to Reuters.

“It’s an enormous mark of failure, and it is not sustainabl­e ... We’re on a very risky path,” said Ann Bernstein, director of the Centre for Developmen­t and Enterprise, a Johannesbu­rg-based think-tank. Social security and economic prosperity were bedrock tenets of ANC policy when it won power under anti-apartheid hero Mandela in 1994. But today more than 60 per cent of South Africans live in poverty, according to the World Bank, while a decade of economic stagnation has pushed unemployme­nt above 32%, nearly 10 points higher than 30 years ago. Over a third of the population receives cash grants and other social support. During the pandemic, the government created a new benefit for the working-age unemployed accessed by over 6 million people. Though meant to be temporary, it was extended earlier this year, against the advice of Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana.

For Thabo Mbeki, an ANC leader and South Africa’s president from 1999 to 2008, the welfare system was never intended to be a cure for poverty and unemployme­nt. Instead, the goal was to grow an inclusive economy so more people could earn an income.

Dalene Raiters lost her job at a local primary school 16 years ago. Her adult son is also jobless. Like many South Africans, their entire family of four lives off the grants of those who qualify. For Raiters that means the 1,080 rand ($58) per month she receives for two minor dependents – her teenage boy and grandson supplement­ed with handouts from a local mosque, feeding schemes or odd jobs she does for neighbours. It’s never enough.

“Sometimes it breaks my heart,” she said, in tears, the Reuters report adds.

While the ANC denies it will need a coalition, most polls predict an end to its single-party governance after May 29. The business-friendly, centre-right Democratic

Alliance (DA) — the largest opposition party - would seem an awkward fit. Though the DA squarely blames the ANC for the country’s current troubles, it has not ruled out partnering with its ideologica­l opponent to prevent what leader John Steenhuise­n dubs a “doomsday coalition” of the ANC and the Marxist EFF. Michael Sachs, an economist at the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies, said the system currently has the resources to support its intended beneficiar­ies: children and pensioners.what it can’t do is cope with the effects of skyrocketi­ng unemployme­nt and formal sector stagnation. For Raiters, the answer isn’t more welfare benefits: only work will give the next generation a chance.

“I know I’m not going to live a long time,” she said. “But for the future, I hope my grandson can get a better job.”

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