Covid-19, social protection and the labour market in South Africa

In light of the South African government’s pandemic-induced expansion of the country’s social protection system to provide relief to vulnerable individuals and households, this paper aims to use newly available, broadly representative survey data – Wave 1 of the NIDS-CRAM – to provide a quantitative, descriptive evaluation of whether social grants are being successfully targeted at the most vulnerable in the context of the national lockdown and COVID-19 crisis. In particular, we highlight heterogeneity in labour market outcomes before and during the national lockdown to show that social grants are an important source of income relief for individuals in low-income households.

We show that these individuals have been disproportionately burdened by adverse labour market effects induced by the lockdown with respect to employment loss, the likelihood of having a paid job to return to, and reductions in working hours and earnings. We show that grants substantially increase the incomes of poor households in relative terms and, through fiscal incidence analysis, show that the pandemic-induced additional government spending on grants have been pro-poor, especially that on the Child Support Grant. Considering the observed heterogeneity in labour market outcomes before and during lockdown across the household income distribution and that grants are relatively well-targeted, we conclude with a set of policy recommendations for South Africa’s social protection system going forward.

Tim is currently a Junior Researcher at the Development Policy Research Unit (DPRU) and a PhD candidate at the University of Cape Town’s (UCT) School of Economics. He obtained a Masters and Honours degree in Economics from Stellenbosch University. Under the supervision of Prof Haroon Bhorat, his PhD dissertation is focussing on how adaptive social protection in the context of adverse shocks can be employed to improve household vulnerability and reduce chronic poverty in South Africa.

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