SA may extend Net 1's welfare contract

File picture: Independent Media

File picture: Independent Media

Published Feb 1, 2017

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Johannesburg - South Africa’s government is considering a

one year extension to a contract with Net 1 UEPS Technologies to make

welfare payments to 17.2 million people even after legal battles with the

company, according to a government official with knowledge of the matter.

Net 1’s contract expires at the end of March and the

government would need to ask the Constitutional Court for permission to extend

it as the agreement was ruled invalid in 2013 because of the way it was awarded

a year earlier. The Johannesburg-based company has offered to keep distributing

R139.5 billion ($10.4 billion) a year to welfare recipients as criticism from

opposition parties has mounted because the Social South African Social Security

Agency hasn’t held a tender to find a replacement for Net 1.

While the government considered six options to ensure the

payments aren’t interrupted, extending Net 1’s contract and then allowing the

nation’s banks to take over the distribution once they have set up the

appropriate systems is seen as the most practical solution, the official said.

The banks would offer accounts designed to protect welfare recipients, often

poor rural citizens with little understanding of how financial systems work,

from companies that offer services such as funeral insurance for children and

mobile phone airtime and then make deductions directly from state payments.

Net 1 has been in legal battles with the government over

the right to allow deductions and it part owns some companies that offer the

services. Sassa officials will appear in parliament on Wednesday to explain

what they plan to do.

Read also:  SA scrambles as R140bn welfare threatened

Opposition parties including the Democratic Alliance have

opposed proposals that Net 1’s contract be extended. The human rights group,

Black Sash Trust, sued the government last year to force it to protect welfare

recipients from companies it alleged were selling goods and services to them

that they didn’t need, and deducting payments from grants paid by the state.

Some of those companies are part-owned by Net 1. The company said that it is

giving poor people access to affordable financial products.

Net 1’s CEO, Serge Belamant, said in an interview on

Tuesday that he would be willing to sell the unit that carries out the payments

to the government, adding that a failure to extend its contract would be a

“national disaster.” He said the government is yet to contact Net 1 about

extending the contract.

Kgomoco Diseko, a spokesman for Sassa, declined to

comment.

BLOOMBERG

 

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