Sowetan

UIF payout spurs man to start farming

Retrenchme­nt a blessing in disguise

- This article was originally published in GCIS’s Vuk’uzenzele

If you have lost your job and are receiving Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund (UIF) payments, see how best you can use the money to secure your future.

This is what 33-year-old Dakalo Ramalivhan­a from Muhuyu village outside Thohoyando­u in Limpopo did. He was retrenched in 2020 due to Covid-19 and used his UIF money to grow vegetables.

Crop farming comes naturally to Ramalivhan­a. “My father had a field and we used to work as a family to produce food, so when I was retrenched in Gauteng, I went home to start farming,” he says.

Ramalivhan­a says while he had seen UIF deductions on his payslips while employed, he did not know what they meant.

“I only found out about claiming UIF when my employer gave me the forms after I was retrenched, and told me to claim at the UIF offices,” he says.

Ramalivhan­a applied at the Thohoyando­u office after moving back home and received a lump sum of R20,000. He used the money to lease a plot of land and buy what he needed to start farming.

His long-term planning paid off and today he produces maize, sweet potatoes and groundnuts, which he sells at a local market.

Ramalivhan­a puts the money left over after meeting his expenses back into the business, which he hopes to grow by planting tomatoes and bananas.

Business has been so good that he was able to buy a bakkie. This has made transporti­ng his produce easier. He has also bought his own land.

Ramalivhan­a’s wife Ndivhuwo

now works with him. He also created jobs for four casual workers, who support their extended families.

Now Ramalivhan­a needs a borehole and to buy a tractor to enable the future growth of his farm.

“My ultimate goal is to employ many young people in my community. I will register them for UIF and pay their contributi­ons because I wouldn’t be here today without the money I received from the UIF.”

 ?? /SUPPLIED ?? Dakalo Ramalivhan­a and his wife Ndivhuwo used his UIF pay-out to start a farming business.
/SUPPLIED Dakalo Ramalivhan­a and his wife Ndivhuwo used his UIF pay-out to start a farming business.

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