South Africa’s primary crisis is food insecurity

Almost 6.5 million people in South Africa go to bed hungry, says the writer. Picture: Armand Hough/African News Agency (ANA)

Almost 6.5 million people in South Africa go to bed hungry, says the writer. Picture: Armand Hough/African News Agency (ANA)

Published Sep 12, 2022

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Amanda Rinquest

Cape Town - Almost 6.5 million people in South Africa go to bed hungry, the majority of whom are women, according to StatsSA.

It is hard to imagine that South Africa, a country that is not food insecure, has a hunger problem. As a country, there are sufficient food resources, but at the household level, food insecurity is a major crisis.

Black Sash recently held a Khuluma – a public discussion – on women and food security. The Women on Farms Project shared a harrowing story of how several of its members reported boiling water in foodless pots in order to, at the very least, give their children the sense that “food is coming”.

Food insecurity is an issue of accessibility and affordability. The food is there, the shop shelves are full – but people cannot afford to purchase it.

The vast majority of people living in South Africa are forced to make a daily choice between food and energy.

In July, those who made the choice to have energy faced hours of load shedding, making the little food they had sour or needing to be consumed much quicker than intended.

What people eat is also important, and when faced with rolling blackouts, inconsistent electricity supply, or unaffordable electricity. People have had to make the choice to buy more non-perishable food and more often less nutritious foodstuffs.

A Black Sash commissioned Research Report, entitled Children, Social Assistance and Food Security, found that the Child Support Grant (CSG), as it currently functions, is inadequate to meet the nutritional needs of children, the economic, social, and psychological consequences of which are debilitating for these children, caregivers and their households.

While in many ways this is partially addressed through the National School Feeding Programme, part of the report’s recommendations is a reconsideration of the CSG model that provides for a basket of nutritional food and other basic needs of children.

This includes macro-food policies, which subsidise the food basket of CSG recipients to ensure food security throughout the life cycle of a child.

This policy must address the various nutritional needs of the different age groups. It ought to include maternity protection for pregnant women and optimal food support in early childhood development (ECD) centres and school feeding/nutritional programmes.

The report calls for a Cash-Plus approach to the implementation of the CSG -- where each recipient and caregiver not only receives their cash grant but that the grant is formally linked to other essential free basic educational services. This should not only include the ECD centres but free school uniforms, free scholar transport etc as well as other free basic services such as electricity, adequate housing, health care etc. (as opposed to the ad-hoc approach we are seeing)

Grant beneficiaries should not exclusively use their grant for food. For this reason, Black Sash is calling for comprehensive and systematic food-provisioning programmes, where a grant is also supplemented by food vouchers, coupons, soup kitchens, food parcels, on-site feeding, etc.

This is part of its broader vision of a Comprehensive Social Protection Floor in South Africa. Because so many of our basic needs are interconnected, a comprehensive Social Protection Floor sets in place a minimum basket of needs and resources a person requires to live a dignified life. These include people’s fundamental human needs such as basic services like water and electricity, access to education, food, public transport etc.

The National Development Plan has called for a defined social protection floor, which outlines an acceptable or decent standard of living. It states that a social floor is “a multi-pronged strategy recommended to ensure that no household lives below this floor. Problems such as poverty-induced hunger, malnutrition and micronutrient deficiencies will be addressed.”

Its approach includes the possibility of social security reforms relating to the informal economy, to mandatory retirement contributions; and a quota of free municipal services.

At the heart of a comprehensive Social Protection Floor is also the need for cash transfers i.e social grants. Both the CSG as well as a possible Basic Income Support Grant must be linked to an objective measure of need, such as the Food Poverty Line (currently R624).

Basic Income Support has now become a food security issue and if we persist with the current status quo -- the R350 grant -- people, children will continue to starve.

The R350 Social Relief of Distress Grant (SRD), is set to end in March 2023, marking 3 years since its inception. Despite its many administrative flaws and the fact that the grant is almost 50% below the food poverty line, it has been a lifeline for many. It has meant the difference between an empty stomach or not. Food security for the poor must be promoted and protected by both government and civil society. Food must be made accessible to all.

Black Sash has for more than two decades been a strong proponent of the Basic Income Grant and strongly advocated for Basic Income Support for people of 18 to 59 years of age who earn no income or little income.

Part of their campaign demands are that:

  • The R350 SRD grant be increased to at least the Food Poverty Line, currently R624.
  • There must be the implementation of permanent social assistance for those aged 18 to 59, valued at the upper-bound poverty line, currently at R1 335 per month.
  • Caregivers who receive the CSG must also qualify for this grant.
  • Ensure that these provisions apply to qualifying refugees, permanent residents, asylum seekers and migrant workers with special permits.
  • Work towards a universal basic income for all.

Faced with the proverbial ‘grants are anti-job’ rhetoric, it must be said that the overwhelming majority of research has shown that to be a false perception and that people use their grant to apply for jobs, print out the CVS, and travel to apply to jobs etc.

It allows people to be more economically active and puts money back into the local economy. Black Sash strongly supports job creation as a solution to addressing the economic challenges of South Africa but it must be complemented by comprehensive social protection, including social assistance for the unemployed and for job-seekers.

Jobs, however, are not what we are talking about now. As the philosopher, Friedrich Engels, so aptly put it “mankind must first of all eat”.

Almost three years since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, its impact has exacerbated unemployment, inequality, and hunger.

Community Based Monitoring conducted by Black Sash and its partners has overwhelmingly found that grants are used to put food on the table – often not for a whole month but at least for part of the month. This means that the time for debating whether we must have basic income support has passed, not when the time taken over debating means that someone else goes to bed with an empty stomach.

Rinquest is the national education and training manager at Black Sash

Cape Times

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StatsSA