Title: ANNEXURE FOUR
1 ANNEXURE FOUR FIVE Socio-Economic Impact of
HIV/AIDSonKwaZulu NatalThe Management
Challenge
- Peter Badcock-Walters Lucinda Franklin
- HEARD
- (Health Economics HIV/AIDS Research Division)
- University of Natal
2ANNEXURE FOUR Socio-Economic Impact
- Lucinda Franklin
- Research Fellow
- HEARD
3Presentation Structure
- HIV in South Africa
- The Demographic Impact
- Economic Impact
- Social Impact
- Socio-Economic Determinants for KZN
- Summary and Conclusions
4HIV in South Africa
5ANC Results
6Age Specific ANC Results
7HIV Positive South Africans
8Demographic Impact
9AIDS and non-AIDS Deaths
10Forecast Mortality
11AIDS Orphans
12Economic Impact
13Channels of Economic Impact
INDIVIDUAL
Smaller population
HOUSEHOLD
MORTALITY
LABOUR MARKET
MACRO ECONOMY
Change in age structure
HIV/AIDS
FIRM/SECTOR
MORBIDITY
GOVERNMENT
14Individual level
- Incubation period (HIV)
- 5-8 years from infection until the onset of AIDS
- Very little economic impact during this time
- AIDS phase
- Period of escalating illness
- Ability to work is reduced
- Cost of care increases
15Household level
- Often more than one household member is infected
(sexually transmitted) - Infections are concentrated among the primary
carers and earners - Double impact of reduced income and increased
costs of care
16Household level cont.
- Less money available for other consumption
- Increased need for care diverts time and effort
from other tasks - children, often girls, may be removed from school
to provide care or generate income - Death(s), often multiple, lead to funeral costs
which are usually large - Disaving may result
17Impact of HIV/AIDS in urban households
General population
Families living with AIDS
30 000 Francs CFA
25 000
Monthly income per capita
20 000
15 000
Monthly consumption per capita
10 000
5 000
Savings/Disavings
0
5 000
Source Simulation based on data from Cote
dIvoire (Bechu, Delcroix and Guillaume) 1997
18Labour Market
- AIDS impacts on the sexually / economically
active population - AIDS related illness leads to
- reduced productivity due to absenteeism, high
turnover etc - AIDS related death leads to
- change in labour force and labour participation
- change in age structure of labour force
- change in available skills and experience
19Company costs
Progression of HIV/AIDS in the Workforce
Economic Impact on the Company
Timeline
Year 0
Employee becomes infected
No costs to company at this stage
Morbidity begins
Morbidity-related costs are incurred (e.g.
absenteeism, individual workforce productivity,
management resources, medical care insurance)
Year 1-5
Employee leaves workforce (resigns or dies)
Termination-related costs are incurred (e.g.
payouts from pension or provident fund, funeral
expenses, loss of morale, experience, work-unit
cohesion)
Year 6 or 7
Company hires replacement employee
Turnover costs are incurred (e.g. recruiting,
training, reduced productivity)
Year 7 or 8
- Effect on production costs, production process,
- demand for capital/labour, output prices and
- competitiveness
20Consumer Markets
- The absolute number of consumers will be reduced
from what it would have been - The age structure of the market will change
- The structure of demand will also change
- eg increase in demand for medical goods and
services - Consumption in South Africa is constrained more
by spending power than by consumer numbers. Who
is infected will play a major role in determining
the degree of impact
21Sectoral Impact
- Impact will vary in degree across sectors
- Some sectors are susceptible to infections
- While others are vulnerable to the impact
- Those sectors that are both vulnerable and
susceptible will be the most seriously hit - The impact on critical sectors in the economy
will play a major role in determining the macro
economic impact
22Government Finance
- Increased demand on government services
- Health
- Welfare
- Poverty reduction
- Although demand will increase, the level of
spending on services will be determined by policy
decisions
23Social Impacts
24Systems
- Health care
- Increased demand
- Decreased ability to offer services as a result
of staff loss - Crowding out
- Similar impact on Welfare services
- Education
- Reduction in demand
- Greater reduction in ability to offer services
25Socialisation
- Psychological impact on children
- Parental illness and death
- Educator illness and death
- Increased death in the community
- Care of orphans
- The need to care for orphans will increase
- Ability of traditional arrangements to cope will
be eroded - Long term impact?
26Socio-Economic Determinants for KZN
- High mobility rates
- Migrancy
- Well-developed transport infrastructure
- High poverty rates
- Women among the poorest in province
- Female-headed households poorest
- Rights and status of women
- Rape and domestic abuse rates
- Cultural barriers deny basic rights and
privileges
27Socio-Economic Determinants for KZN
- Labour migration rates
- Direct result of lack of employment opportunities
in rural areas - Apartheid labour system
- Men obliged to leave homes/families to reside in
single-sex hostels - Concentrated development efforts in cities
- Commercial sex work
- Prospers in these conditions
28Summary and Conclusions
29Conclusions
- HIV has already reached very high levels in South
Africa and is set to rise for a few more years - The resultant increase in death will change the
structure of the population - Households and individuals will feel the greatest
economic impact - The impact on companies and sectors will vary
- The macroeconomic impact will be felt in the long
term
30Conclusions
- Health care, welfare and education systems will
be adversely affected - HIV/AIDS is the single greatest threat to
development in South Africa - Our greatest concern is the impact that HIV will
have on our children - HIV/AIDS not simply a public health problem it
demands a committed innovative multisectoral
response