The South
African Social Security Agency has achieved something noteworthy. It has made payments of social grants early
for the Christmas season, but then withdrawn those payments that were not
collected earlier than usual, leaving 35 000 recipients destitute for the month. Noting that the number of persons who would
not receive their grants for December was “only 35 000” out of a total of
11 000 000, the spokesman for SASSA stated that, in his opinion, that
was not a bad result! He also pointed
out that SASSA had notified grant recipients of the early payment date by
advertisements in newspapers.
Perhaps it
is time for a reality check.
The grant
provides an absolute minimum amount of money for a single person to buy food
for a month. When the Minister of
Finance smugly announced an increase in the grant amount by R50 per month in
2013, on the same day the price of a two litre bottle of milk increased at Pick
n Pay by fifty-six cents. Let us assume that
a pensioner uses for litres of milk per week – probably an underestimate. That means that the cost of milk alone
increased on that day by R4-82 per month, representing an increase of 9,6% of
the grant increase, for one item in the shopping basket! And that assumes that the grant recipient is
supporting just himself. The hard truth
is that the average grant recipient is supporting at least another two persons.
In order
for our grant recipient to see the notification about the early payment of the
grants, that recipient would have to buy at least one newspaper per week – say a
cost of R25 per week, or R107 per month – another 7,4% of his grant! And that assumes that the recipient is able
to read, which is certainly not a given!
To impose a
rule that the grant has to be collected within a certain number of days also
fails to take into account the fact that many of the recipients have to walk
for many kilometres to reach a point where they can make the withdrawal. Many of these people make arrangements to
reach the collection point using the goodwill of others, and those arrangements
can often not be altered merely to suit the whim of an unthinking SASSA
official. The penalty for being too poor
to own a car to collect the parlous amount that SASSA so generously pays is
starvation for the month! A brief visit
to any of the State hospitals around the country will show queues of hundreds
of people waiting for up to twelve hours to see a doctor. Most of those will be grant recipients – they
have to be desperate to submit themselves to the incompetence and arrogance of
the State medical service! Many of those
recipients will be constrained by their state of health in the outings they
make to the nearest ATM to check whether the payment of the grant has yet been
made. They rely on it being available to
them at the normal time. In many cases,
illness prevents them being able to collect the grant at all for the duration
of the illness.
The SASSA
official stated that, if the recipient missed the December grant payment
window, SASSA would make a food parcel available to them, with a warning that
the value of that food parcel would be deducted from the amount of the grant
paid to them in January! Does that man
live in the real world? The grant is not
enough to live on, so how would making an advance payment of next month’s grant
amount help, other than to postpone starvation for a month? Of course, getting the food parcel entails a
trip to a SASSA office, usually a much more time consuming and costly exercise
than a trip to an ATM, and a wait there for up to ten hours to see the official
concerned.
The
statement that “only 35 000” recipients would not receive payment of their
grants tells any intelligent observer that SASSA is a heartless organisation,
with no understanding of the plight of the people they are there to serve. “Only 35 000” is a huge number of
people! One is reminded of the comment
by the Eastern Cape MEC for Economic Development, that the rate of unemployment
in the Eastern Cape is “only 69%!” and therefore did not warrant any particular
effort to correct the problem!
One wonders
how well the top officials would respond to having their December salaries
withheld for a month, because they did not spot a particular announcement in a
newspaper! It might be an interesting
exercise to withhold a randomly-selected 2% of SASSA salaries each month, to
gain an insight into the effects of this rather arrogant rule.
What
hardship would it cause to SASSA or to the ANC Government to leave the
uncollected grant payments in the accounts of the recipients for at least a
month, or preferably six weeks after the payment is made, to allow for the very
real difficulties experienced by the poverty-stricken recipients in collecting
this money?
Perhaps
even more interesting will be the response to the unfeeling actions of SASSA at
the next election, when the large number of ANC-voting poor have the chance to
express their anger.
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