South Africa's social assistance intervention as a building block of a developmental state

This study explores the extent to which South Africa's social assistance programme can constitute a building block of a developmental state. Using a critical research approach and Taylor's conceptual framework (2002) that draws on Sen's understanding of development as freedom, I explo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chagunda, Chance Arisitaliko
Other Authors: Taylor, Viviene
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8691
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-8691
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-86912020-07-22T05:07:28Z South Africa's social assistance intervention as a building block of a developmental state Chagunda, Chance Arisitaliko Taylor, Viviene This study explores the extent to which South Africa's social assistance programme can constitute a building block of a developmental state. Using a critical research approach and Taylor's conceptual framework (2002) that draws on Sen's understanding of development as freedom, I explore the impact of cash transfers on households, on access to socio-economic opportunities and to the overall development of local democracy. Sen's capability approach and theoretical analysis of development helps to link different dimensions of poverty with human and institutional capabilities. There are five research objectives: examining whether a cash transfer has a developmental impact on the people who receive it; establishing whether cash transfers improve opportunities for households to take part in socio-economic activities; investigating how cash transfers promote civic participation and local democracy; ascertaining ways in which cash transfers promote development; and ascertaining the extent to which a cash transfer could be a significant feature of a developmental state. The findings are in two parts. The first is a review of the relevant literature. Previous studies have found that social grants can lead to poverty reduction, help to send dependents to school and enable respondents to get loans to start their own businesses. The second part consists of new findings, based on interviews from a purposive sample of 160 men and women from Khayelitsha and Graafwater in the Western Cape who received a social grant. The respondents perceived the cash transfer as opening up socio-economic opportunities for them, such as skills training. Social grants also reportedly enabled women to break free of abusive relationships and function independently, which they described as restoring their human dignity and freedom. Further, 46% indicated that the social grant income assisted them to become active citizens. A minority of respondents, especially those with small businesses or employment, perceive the grants as a backup in case of business failure or retrenchment. My assumption of cash transfers having a developmental impact has been confirmed. In conclusion, the thesis expands the theoretical and policy understanding of social assistance beyond its impacts on income poverty and provides new insights on the multiple ways through which cash transfers enable poor household members to participate in enterprise development and in building local democracy. Based on the findings, recommendations are offered to government and stakeholders. 2014-10-21T13:42:19Z 2014-10-21T13:42:19Z 2014 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8691 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities Department of Social Development
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
description This study explores the extent to which South Africa's social assistance programme can constitute a building block of a developmental state. Using a critical research approach and Taylor's conceptual framework (2002) that draws on Sen's understanding of development as freedom, I explore the impact of cash transfers on households, on access to socio-economic opportunities and to the overall development of local democracy. Sen's capability approach and theoretical analysis of development helps to link different dimensions of poverty with human and institutional capabilities. There are five research objectives: examining whether a cash transfer has a developmental impact on the people who receive it; establishing whether cash transfers improve opportunities for households to take part in socio-economic activities; investigating how cash transfers promote civic participation and local democracy; ascertaining ways in which cash transfers promote development; and ascertaining the extent to which a cash transfer could be a significant feature of a developmental state. The findings are in two parts. The first is a review of the relevant literature. Previous studies have found that social grants can lead to poverty reduction, help to send dependents to school and enable respondents to get loans to start their own businesses. The second part consists of new findings, based on interviews from a purposive sample of 160 men and women from Khayelitsha and Graafwater in the Western Cape who received a social grant. The respondents perceived the cash transfer as opening up socio-economic opportunities for them, such as skills training. Social grants also reportedly enabled women to break free of abusive relationships and function independently, which they described as restoring their human dignity and freedom. Further, 46% indicated that the social grant income assisted them to become active citizens. A minority of respondents, especially those with small businesses or employment, perceive the grants as a backup in case of business failure or retrenchment. My assumption of cash transfers having a developmental impact has been confirmed. In conclusion, the thesis expands the theoretical and policy understanding of social assistance beyond its impacts on income poverty and provides new insights on the multiple ways through which cash transfers enable poor household members to participate in enterprise development and in building local democracy. Based on the findings, recommendations are offered to government and stakeholders.
author2 Taylor, Viviene
author_facet Taylor, Viviene
Chagunda, Chance Arisitaliko
author Chagunda, Chance Arisitaliko
spellingShingle Chagunda, Chance Arisitaliko
South Africa's social assistance intervention as a building block of a developmental state
author_sort Chagunda, Chance Arisitaliko
title South Africa's social assistance intervention as a building block of a developmental state
title_short South Africa's social assistance intervention as a building block of a developmental state
title_full South Africa's social assistance intervention as a building block of a developmental state
title_fullStr South Africa's social assistance intervention as a building block of a developmental state
title_full_unstemmed South Africa's social assistance intervention as a building block of a developmental state
title_sort south africa's social assistance intervention as a building block of a developmental state
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8691
work_keys_str_mv AT chagundachancearisitaliko southafricassocialassistanceinterventionasabuildingblockofadevelopmentalstate
_version_ 1719330411993104384