Cape Times

System invites wolves to the door

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The dispute hovering over South Africa’s social grant system and threatenin­g millions of vulnerable beneficiar­ies with non-payment creates risks that go far beyond interrupti­ng poor people’s access to desperatel­y needed grants. In this article, Andries du Toit, who is the director of the Institute for Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies at UWC, explains the failure of the South African Social Security Agency.

THE South African Social Security Agency (Sassa), which is responsibl­e for the timeous payment and administra­tion of social grants, has created a crisis that threatens to deliver grant recipients into the hands of unscrupulo­us financial services companies.

The latest instalment in the bizarre saga came last week. Sassa officials announced that they would file papers with the Constituti­onal Court proposing their invalid contract with Cash Paymaster Services (CPS), which holds the contract for grant distributi­on, should be extended for another year.

This contract was awarded to CPS in a controvers­ial tender in 2012. It was declared invalid two years ago by the Constituti­onal Court, which instructed Sassa to reissue the tender. As the deadline came closer, civil rights groups such as Black Sash started sounding warning bells that Sassa was not implementi­ng the court’s orders.

Deadline after deadline passed, and by the end of 2016 it was clear that Sassa had utterly failed to act on the court’s instructio­ns. Late last week it appeared that Sassa had missed another one. It didn’t make its planned eleventh hour submission.

This means there is no credible arrangemen­t in place to ensure that social grants will be paid when the court’s deadline expires on March 31. The social grant system supports about 17 million individual­s. Disrupting the payments will cause huge suffering to the country’s poorest and most vulnerable people and is likely to lead to social unrest.

With last week’s announceme­nt, it seems that Sassa officials intended simply to present the Constituti­onal Court and the National Treasury with an impossible situation: condone an illegal contract, or face the possibilit­y of social and political chaos.

But there’s even more at stake. If the court allows a further extension of the invalid contract (or approves a new contract with CPS), Sassa will have perpetuate­d a situation in which the accounts of grant recipients have in effect become mere conduits between the South African fiscus and the private financial empire that has taken shape around grant disburseme­nt.

More than a contract is at stake

At the centre of the storm is CPS, originally a small financial services company. CPS is a subsidiary of Net1 UEPS Technologi­es, a listed global financial services and logistics group with operations in a number of countries including South Africa, India and Tanzania.

Net1 owns the fingerprin­t-based biometric identifica­tion and payment system that is central to CPS’s operations.

Their proprietar­y Universal Electronic Payments System technology forms the “back end” of the Sassa smart card CPS uses in the electronic payment of grants. It is access to this system that has enabled CPS to roll out payments to the whole country.

While convenient for CPS, scholar Keith Breckenrid­ge has pointed out that this creates an unpreceden­ted situation – grant beneficiar­ies are captured within a private technologi­cal and financial network owned and controlled, not by Sassa, but by its service provider.

Here it should be noted that the work of CPS is only part of a bigger corporate strategy. Also part of Net1’s global empire are financial services companies like MoneyLine, EasyPay, Manje Mobile Solutions, Smart Life and others. These companies act in concert to make use of the opportunit­ies afforded by CPS’s control of the payment network.

Millions of grant beneficiar­ies, for example, have not only been provided with a Sassa account; their accounts have also been linked to EasyPay Everywhere, a bank account operated by MoneyLine and CPS’s banking partner, Grindrod Bank.

All this is part of an explicit two-stage strategy on the part of Net1: a first wave in which it rolls out its technologi­cal infrastruc­ture, and a second wave in which it uses this infrastruc­ture to market a wide array of products and services to an essentiall­y captive customer base.

The net effect is that social grant recipients are now tied up in a web of dependency on financial services companies controlled by Net1.

What this means for financial inclusion

This creates two problems. First, this arrangemen­t may be in violation of competitio­n law. It looks as if Net1 is making use of CPS’s privileged position as social grant paymaster to give its sister companies first bite and privileged access to a vast potential client base.

Second, it raises an issue that’s often forgotten in sweeping generalisa­tions about the need to cover the “unbanked” with financial services. Yes, poor people need access to banking services, and may benefit from smart cards and electronic banking. But these services should be designed with their interests in mind.

Deborah James and Dinah Rajak have shown how, in South Africa, the history of “credit apartheid” and paternalis­tic control over poor people’s finance has created a situation where creditors wield disproport­ionate power. Unbridled financial inclusion of the poor may amount to adverse incorporat­ion into a financial sector geared towards preying on them.

Already, the Black Sash has collected evidence of troubling instances of unauthoris­ed and unlawful deductions from accounts set up for grant recipients, often with very little recourse.

This is why the social grants crisis has implicatio­ns beyond the distributi­on of payments. Sassa has missed a major opportunit­y to ensure that financial inclusion happens in a beneficial, “pro-poor” way. It failed to follow the Constituti­onal Court’s order that the payment of social grants should be done in a way that protects the rights, interests and confidenti­al data of grant beneficiar­ies. Instead, it has created a situation in which CPS and Net1 hold all the cards. At present, the Constituti­onal Court and Treasury have almost no leverage to prevent their service provider from simply walking away on April 1.

Already, Net1 chief executive Serge Belamant has made it clear that he is not interested in extending the contract on its present terms. He is in a position to ask for whatever he wants – including provisions that lock claimants even more tightly into his empire.

Sassa’s inactivity has created the worst possible outcome, not only in the short but also in the long term. A crisis over grant distributi­on looms, and the opportunit­y to provide meaningful financial inclusion has been missed.

For interviews and more informatio­n, contact Harriet Box 021 959 9566 or 082 748 5377 / 072 266 4760 contact hbox@uwc.ac.za or harrietl. box@gmail.com

Du Toit is the director of the Institute for Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies at UWC, a donorfunde­d research institute that relies on funding from a range of developmen­t and policy research organisati­ons including the Department of Internatio­nal Developmen­t, the Economic and Social Research Council, the Department of Science and Technology and the National Research Foundation.

This article first appeared in the

 ?? Picture: WILLEM LAW ?? DEPENDENT: Pensioners queue at Cape Town’s Athlone Civic Centre waiting to receive their social grant payouts.
Picture: WILLEM LAW DEPENDENT: Pensioners queue at Cape Town’s Athlone Civic Centre waiting to receive their social grant payouts.
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SERGE BELAMANT
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