Proposed legal reforms to protect South Africa's informal social security

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University of Pretoria

Abstract

Informal social security is a non-governmental form of social security between kin and/or community members and is a prevalent practice in South Africa. The question this dissertation analyses is whether the South African government fails in its constitutional duty to protect and advance informal social security. The dissertation limits itself to analysing cash transfers through social grants, and social insurance in the Unemployment Insurance Act and the Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act. This dissertation delineates its definition of informal social security, historically contextualises its practice, and explains the contemporary formal social security framework. This dissertation finds five prominent shortcomings in the formal framework, and that these shortcomings have a profoundly negative, weakening effect on informal social security, as the more people who rely on informal mechanisms, the less it can respond to needs arising from life contingencies, shocks, and risks. The dissertation concludes by analysing three legal reform proposals the state can implement: extending existing social insurance frameworks to those in the informal sector, promoting cooperatives as a formal platform for the informal, and the basic income grant.

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Dissertation (LLM (Mercantile Law)--University of Pretoria, 2024.

Keywords

UCTD, Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Informal social security, History, Social security, Social assistance, Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, Duty, Cooperatives, Basic income grant

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-01: No poverty
SDG-02: Zero hunger
SDG-03: Good health and well-being

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