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Child Support Grants in South Africa Leila Patel Centre for Social Development in Africa Faculty of Humanities
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Child Support Grant Means tested non-contributory cash transfer – tax funded - introduced in 1998 Paid to the care-giver of children 0-18 years (R 250 or US$ 33.3) Care-giver is parent, relatives or non-relatives Grant follows the child Beneficiary numbers: 3million in 1995 to 14million in 2010 on grants 3.5% of GDP
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South Africa Social Protection Strategy Social assistance – old age pensions, disability grants, child support grant (CSG) Complemented by public services: education, health, housing, basic services, public works, SMME’s Progressive taxation – redistribution In-kind programmes e.g. school feeding, price subsidies, VAT exemptions Challenges
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The Policy Process Policy context – reconstruction and development GEAR – shift to market oriented strategy Gaps in social protection identified by research Consultative participatory policy process Mechanism for development of proposal was committee of enquiry
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The Lund Committee for Child and Family Support Composition Terms of reference & time frame Research Policy options considered Non-conditional cash transfer preferred option Greatest poverty impact for poor and destitute children and families
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Political Process Lund Report completed September 1996 Political and legislative process – 14 months 1 st applications – April 1998 Proposal released to parliament Public hearings – civil society participation Revision of proposals based on submissions Trade off between developing proposal quickly & long consultative process Political management by minister & public service
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Implementation Project management team Legislation drafted State maintenance grants abolished CSG created Administrative & computer systems redesigned Agent for delivery 80% receive cash delivery via shops, government offices, old age homes, post offices Small percent through banks Link with financial services
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Finance Alternative sources considered Initial cost R5 billion Increased spending on social welfare of 120% between 1991-1997 Health 30%, education 26%, decreased defence of 48% Average growth of CSG 14% since 2006 R38.5 billion in 2012/2013 Transaction costs between R24 – R35 per payment
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Implementation Challenges Human resources & infrastructure Lack of co-ordination between government departments Documentary requirements is a barrier e.g. birth registrations & proof of income Means test not adjusted for inflation Inconsistent application of regulations Lack of awareness of grants Government & civil society collaboration New conditionalities introduced in 2010
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Impact Reach – 9.4 million CSG beneficiaries, 68% of total grant beneficiaries Grant is well targeted Reaches the poor, largely women who are black, 50% single parents 83% not employed Even split between male and female beneficiaries Take-up rate between 78 – 80%
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Impact contd. Without CSG 48% would be poor, 24% would be ultra-poor Extension of CSG to 18yrs will reduce poverty gap by 28.3% Full take-up of all 3 grants could lower Gini coefficient by 3 percentage points 79% spent money on food 26% school fees 25% school uniforms 22% electricity
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Impact contd. Decrease child hunger, positive nutritional impact in height-for-age gains Spinoffs for future earnings 60 – 130% Positive impacts on school attendance No positive association between CSG and teenage pregnancies
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Critical Success Factors Credibility, leadership, expertise of Lund Committee Evidence based approach Confidence & trust of politicians helped consensus building Strong administrative capacity in grants delivery Window of opportunity in transition Innovation Ongoing government, political & electoral support for social protection floor
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