Title: The South African Child Support Grant
1The South African Child Support Grant
- Francie Lund
- School of Development Studies
- University of KwaZulu-Natal
- Presentation to Social Work 1V Research Methods
March 2007
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3The Child Support Grant
- In 1996, the South African government introduced
a policy reform for the support of children in
poor households - - from birth to seventh birthday
- - means tested (income less than R1100 a month
in rural areas, R800 in urban areas) - - payable monthly to a primary care giver
- Policy decision was strongly influenced by what
was known of other grants -
-
4Universal concerns about welfare spending, and
cash transfers in particular
- There are many strongly held beliefs about the
CSG (and about welfare spending generally) - Wasteful, non-productive, creates dependency
- And in particular
- Unemployment benefits will lead to idleness
- Households will split
- People will get pregnant to get the grants
- Higher fertility as barrier to development
- Especial concern re teenage pregnancy
- Concerns about increase in permissive behaviour
- We will come back to these.
5Violins story
- At PSLSD Quantitative Survey, 1993, she was
recorded as aged 58, widowed, and unemployed. - At KIDS Quantitative survey in 1998, she was
recorded as aged 63, widowed, unemployed, and
receiving the state non-contributory Old Age
Pension. - We visited in 2001 with qualitative study.
6What Violin told us that she does
- In the dry winter months, she is a specialist mud
plasterer of houses. She tells no-one of her
unique recipe for sand-cement mix that makes her
the specialist. - She employs a young man to drive the span of oxen
to get the river sand for the plaster mix. - For many years she has sewn and sold dresses
(pinafores) with a machine brought for her by
her late husband. - She uses her state pension money to buy the bolts
of material (used husbands pension money for
this before he died). - She sews in the summer months, employing other
women to help her when she gets a big order. - She employs a woman to work her fields,
on-and-off in winter while she plasters, but
nearly every day in summer. - Neighbours helped her build her 3-roomed house
she paid them with dresses. - She also collects and sells firewood, sometimes
paying someone cash to help with chopping, other
times making an ilimo (traditional work group)
she then brews Zulu beer as payment.
7Outline
- Why the CSG? Why a cash transfer?
- What we know about coverage and impact of other
cash transfers? - What do we know (so far) about the performance of
the CSG?
8Different policies are designedto meet different
purposes
- Child and family policies could be
- Keep family unit together (general aim)
- Increase number of children (France)
- Decrease or limit number of children (China)
- Increase school attendance of children
(Oportunidades in Mexico) - Provide for substitute home-based parental care
the Foster Care Grant in South Africa - Reduce poverty experienced by children (CSG in
SA)
9Stylised characteristics of African family life
in South Africa
- Single parenthood
- High proportion of children living with mothers
only, and not living with either parent - Men having dual families one urban one rural
- Some polygamy
- Extended families three or four generations
- Skip generations
- HOUSEHOLD BOUNDARIES ARE
- OPEN, AND FLUID
10Good impacts of the OAP and DGinfluenced the
policy decision for a CSG
- Secures the position of the elderly and people
with disabilities - Enables care of others (Lund 2002)
- Household income smoothing
- Where there is pooling, better health status for
other members (Case) - Pay for educational costs of children (Case and
Deaton) - Small enterprise development
11The CSG
- As expected, after a slow start, now reaches more
than 7 million children (S-shaped curve) - Age has been extended to 14
- Reaches rural and urban areas
- Many bureaucratic obstacles, formal and informal
- We know that it is getting out there (coverage),
but what is its IMPACT?
12Research on the CSG all the findings go in the
same direction
- Still barriers of access for many individuals
- But 7 million grants in eight years
- Well targeted for poverty
- Most primary caregivers are mothers
- Good effects on school enrolment
- Unexpected finding the importance of the
presence of the biological mother in the
household
13The Africa Centre and itsDemographic Information
System (ACDIS)
- In the Mkhanyakude District, Hlabisa, northern
KwaZulu-Natal - Routine census in more than 11 000 households in
the Demographic Surveillance Area (DSA) - Child Grant module added to the census in early
2002 - CSG had been gazetted in April 1998
- Paper appears as Case, Hosegood and Lund
14The significance of this Hlabisa area
- Very rural
- Predominantly African
- Very poor
- High burden of disease, associated with HIV/AIDS
- High rates of migration
- Thus precisely the kind of area for which the CSG
was intended
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16The survey size and focus
- 11178 households answered the questionnaire
- 3615 HHs (32) were holding or had applied for
(reported) 6039 child-oriented grants - Overwhelming majority (94) were CSGs (not Foster
Care or Care Dependency) - In this paper we deal with the 12865 children
aged 0 to 7 who were resident on January 1 2002,
of whom - - 4684 had a CSG (not the other two grants)
reported on their behalf - - and of these, 3754 (80.1) were actively
receiving a CSG.
17The good news is
- About one third of age eligible resident children
in the area were receiving the Child Support
Grant - The vast majority of the primary caregivers were
biological mothers - The grant appeared to be well targeted for
children in poorer households - About half of those who applied for the child
support grant, got it within three months of
applying - There are worrying results as well
18- We compare the sample means for children, and for
the households in which they live, and we explore
what variables will predict whether the child
will get access to the grant - Parents can be classified as
- resident
- non-resident
- dead
- none of the above - unknown or missing
19Table 1 Mean characteristics of children less
than 7( denotes the difference in means between
samples is significant at 1 level)
20Table 1 continued ( denotes the difference in
means between samples is significant at 1 level)
21Who are the primary caregivers?
- The idea of primary care giver was an
international - breakthrough in child policy in order to reach
out to children, do not restrict the grant to
biological parent - In the DSA
- 87 are resident mothers
- 10 are grandmothers
- 1 are aunts
- 0.2 are fathers, and there were two other men
22Multiple grantholding
- Number of grantholders
- 2238
- 796
- 174
- 12
- Number of grants held
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
23Assessment of targeting
- Over 80 of children over aged one 1 for whom an
enquiry had been made, were receiving the grant - Very few applicants had been rejected
- Could this be because officials are just giving
grants to anyone who applies? - What do you do when there are no reliable
measures of income? - But three variables which are known to be related
to poverty are in ACDIS data - education level of mother and father
- employment status of mother and father
- household ownership of a bundle of assets
-
24Targeting results
- There is a significant association for all three
variables. - Both mothers and fathers of grant-reporting
children have lower levels of education than the
mothers and fathers of children for whom grants
are not reported - Both mothers and fathers of grant-reporting
children are more likely to be unemployed, or in
part-time employment, than the mothers and
fathers of children for whom grants are not
reported - There is a slight but significant difference in
the mean ownership of numbers of assets between
the samples. - There is a very strong separately and jointly
significant difference between samples in
ownership of a selection of luxury assets, such
as car, hot water geyser, refrigerator,
television.
25Really worrying findings
- There are still eligible children who do not get
the CSG. - There are large numbers of children who should be
getting the Care Dependency Grants, and Foster
Care Grants with one or both parents dead, it
makes processing these very difficult indeed. - The biggest single predictor of whether a child
would have a grant reported for it was the
presence of the childs own mother.
26- Why are other non-maternal carers not applying
for the CSG? - The CSG has been extended. The older children
get, the fewer live with their mothers. - CSG money spent on educational expenses.
27The need for and difficulty of impact assessment
- CSG is a relatively small amount, compared to Old
Age Pension and Disability Grant which have
both also been extended - HIV/ AIDS is changing the way that households are
spending for example, health costs, and funeral
costs - It is also changing the way that people are
earning - As well as what people are doing (going to
school, being absent from work through illness - Difficult if not impossible to capture the
influence of the CSG - The CSG is being extended to 14 years of age
28So, back to beliefs about the influence of cash
transfers
29National and provincial expenditure
estimates2001/ 02
30Composition of income in South African income
deciles (RSA, 2001)
31Time to receipt
- Some of the questions on administration did not
work well. - Especially when the primary care giver was not
the respondent people had no knowledge of the
in-between steps, they knew only of when the CSG
arrived. - Nevertheless
- The results are reported in units of one quarter
of a year.
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33The takeup rate
- The rate of take-up of new programmes can be
expected to resemble a forward-leaning S-shaped
curve - a slow start
- a rapid increase as the programme takes
- a plateau as it matures
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