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Statement from CAF concerning a Special Covid-19 grant

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Statement from CAF concerning a Special Covid-19 grant

President Cyril Ramaphosa
President Cyril Ramaphosa

15th April 2020

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/ MEDIA STATEMENT / The content on this page is not written by Polity.org.za, but is supplied by third parties. This content does not constitute news reporting by Polity.org.za.

An open statement to President Cyril Ramaphosa and the Cabinet of South Africa from the members of the Concerned Africans Forum (CAF).  Their names can be found at the bottom of this statement. 

Firstly, we would like to take this opportunity to commend you and the government for the decisive steps taken to curb and manage the spread of this Covid-19 pandemic. We also would like to commend you for engaging the indigenous healers in our country, and recommend that, as the Minister of Health,  Dr Zweli Mkhize has done, he must continue to be in touch with the members of this institution. They are closely in touch with the poor of the poorest in our nation; let us together find a solution on how to engage the challenges coming from that sector of our nation, during these trying times.

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We agreed to write this statement because as, you have indicated in your latest press release, there are three areas of critical focus as we together move forward in curbing this pandemic in South Africa.

You indicated that the strategy is made up of three parts:

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- Firstly, an intensified public health response to slow down and reduce infections.

- Secondly, a comprehensive package of economic support measures to assist businesses and individuals affected by the pandemic.

- Thirdly, a programme of increased social support to protect poor and vulnerable households.

The focus of our statement, Mr President, is the third focus area; a programme of increased social support to protect poor and vulnerable households. 

In this regard we would like to echo calls made from various quarters for our government to strongly consider a special Covid-19 grant or a basic income grant for the poorest segment in our society, in other words the six million citizens who neither have employment nor qualify for social assistance from our government, and hence have nothing during these trying times of not only the lockdown period but the entire period of this pandemic.  These traditionally would be the 18-59-year-old men and women in our country. 

In other words, we would strongly recommend  income transfers to lower-income and affected households, in the form of a special Covid-19 grant,  and/or a universal basic income grant. Creativity is needed to speed up delivery, including income transfers via digital payment mechanisms. We appreciate the practical difficulties involved. 

Also, our government must ensure food security and food sovereignty through a coordinated and safe roll-out of food packages in food-stressed neighbourhoods; and furthermore ensure free mobile data and public internet access, to keep the public informed.

Only if this process proves impossible to administer for all those citizens not on the government system due to the required verification and biometric requirements in place, then another proposal,  which is also endorsed by numerous NGOs in the child support sectors has been put forward. This is the temporary increasing of the existing child support grants. 

Here we must remember that many of the children  who are no longer recipients of the grant because they fall outside the 18 year old cut-off, are still living with their respective parents and hence such an increase could also benefit them. We already have them on the government system by virtue of their having been recipients not so long ago. 

It is common cause now that by the end of March 2020, 84 countries had introduced or adapted social protection and jobs programmes in response to Covid-19. The most widely used intervention was social assistance (non-contributory cash transfers). Perhaps SASSA cannot enrol new beneficiaries into the social grant system during lockdown because the required verification and biometric requirements cannot be completed. The quickest and simplest way, however, to channel much-needed cash into poor households is via existing beneficiaries.

The child support grant (CSG) is well established. It is by far the biggest grant in terms of numbers, reaching 12.8 million children – nearly two thirds of all children in South Africa. It is received every month by over seven million adult beneficiaries and contributes to the income of nearly 5.7 million households. Although child support grants are meant to be spent directly on the children to whom they are allocated, they effectively become part of household budgets and help to support entire households. Therefore, increasing this grant is likely to benefit other members of the household.

Mr President, we all know that without some of these desperately needed measures for the poor, they will most certainly fall further into destitution.  Many others will most certainly suffer job losses on a large scale, with falling incomes and businesses closing, this situation will simply become critically untenable. 

We must do this not because we are worried about poor communities protesting and causing havoc on our streets, Mr President, but because this is the right thing to do.  Period.

We remain confident that as your team consider all options open to them, this proposal will also receive the necessary consideration.

We want to take this opportunity to again say thank you to you and the team for a sterling job and for providing the nation with the requisite leadership in this very trying time.  We also want to agree wholeheartedly, with your sentiments that, we shall recover.  We shall overcome.

All the very best Mr President. 

Mongane Serote

Aziz Pahad

 

Issued by The Concerned Africans Forum

 

 

 

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