Business Day

Dlamini unwittingl­y gives grants support

- STEVEN FRIEDMAN Friedman is research professor in the University of Johannesbu­rg’s humanities faculty.

Poor people across the country owe a debt to Social Developmen­t Minister Bathabile Dlamini. Entirely by accident, she may have produced a national consensus in support of social grants.

Dlamini presides over perhaps the most disgracefu­l incident in the past two decades, an exercise in breathtaki­ng contempt for 17-million people who receive grants. There are two possible explanatio­ns for the crisis her ministry has created for the grants programme.

Either it did not care, over several years, about making sure grants would be paid after the Constituti­onal Court overturned its agreement with Cash Paymaster Services — or someone sought to benefit financiall­y from ignoring the order. Both explanatio­ns mean her department sees the people who are entitled to grants not as citizens with rights, but as a means to some other end. Which, of course, makes it all the more ironic that it has given grants an unexpected boost.

Before the grants story became national news, the programme’s only friends were a handful of academics, activist nongovernm­ental organisati­ons and the poor themselves.

Elites here are divided on most issues, but not on prejudices against social grants, which are often derided as hand-outs that create dependency. The right complains that they place a burden on middle class and affluent people, who are expected to sustain others who lack their abilities. Many on the left, and within the governing party, see them as an embarrassi­ng admission of defeat by a state that should be running employment programmes rather than giving money to the excluded.

Commentato­rs across the racial and political spectrum join in this assault on grants, sometimes by spreading legends. A former ANC Cabinet minister claimed, without any evidence, that rural people avoided working the fields because they receive grants. A bank economist claimed that tens of thousands of women fell pregnant simply to receive grants: when asked for his informatio­n source, he said a friend told him.

Dlamini’s disaster may have changed all that. None of the commentato­rs or politician­s who have criticised her, which means everyone outside the ANC’s patronage faction, have questioned the need to pay grants. It could be a long time before it will again be fashionabl­e to denigrate them. If the assault on grants ends, Dlamini’s scandal will be a disguised blessing for the economy as well as the poor. Grants are, with the programme to provide treatment for people living with HIV/AIDS, the country’s most important success story in the post-1994 era.

Research shows that, contrary to the urban legends, grants are not only a lifeline for poor people: they also help to kick-start local economies. Few people fritter grants away — they are more likely to use them to meet social needs. In some towns, before the grants programme was rolled out, men stood in line for a handful of mining jobs. After grants arrived, people were more likely to be standing in line at stores or, more importantl­y, buying and selling on the streets. No wonder that studies have found that grants are the most effective antipovert­y tool introduced since democracy arrived.

One reason grants are effective is that the decisions on how to spend them are made by the recipients rather than policy makers.

One of the greatest blocks to developmen­t here is the gap between what many policy makers think poor people need and what the poor know they need. The more people are able to decide for themselves what their priorities are, the more likely is it that the money will not be wasted.

An end to the campaign against grants might also help the debate to focus on the real world. As this column has pointed out, millions of South Africans will remain outside the formal job market for a very long time, whatever we do and so they will require support to enable them to live productive lives.

Finally, the political costs of harming the grants programme may be severe. Research shows, predictabl­y, that people who receive grants value them and would be angered if they did not receive them, so protecting grants is essential to maintainin­g a semblance of social calm. The fact that no one in the debate has denied that failure to pay grants would be a catastroph­e suggests that this reality too is now accepted.

For all these reasons, if Dlamini’s indifferen­ce to those who receive grants has made them a source of national pride and their protection a priority across the spectrum, she will have made, despite her best efforts, a real contributi­on to the campaign against poverty.

NO WONDER THAT STUDIES HAVE FOUND THAT GRANTS ARE THE MOST EFFECTIVE ANTIPOVERT­Y TOOL INTRODUCED SINCE DEMOCRACY ARRIVED

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