When the cross-border remittance system fails : the impact of COVID-19 regulations on the food provision and access for cross-border migrant households in north-western Zimbabwe

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Cambridge University Press

Abstract

Cross-border remittances from South Africa have played a central role in the food availability and well-being of migrant labour households in semi-arid Zimbabwe. However, the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and containment measures introduced by both the South African and Zimbabwean governments hampered the cross-border remittance system and the movement of goods. This paper explores the food provisioning and availability impacts of the changes brought by the cocktail of policy measures on migrant sending households, and whether these households were able to find alternative food sources locally. The study highlights a precarious situation for affected households, which saw their main source of food provisioning curtailed. It argues that the situation was further aggravated by the risk associated with alternative remittance channels, and the non-availability of local alternatives for these households, which were excluded from accessing food parcels/aid by the criteria used to determine beneficiaries. The paper demonstrates the vulnerability of migrant labour households to economic and labour market changes.

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Keywords

Food, Cross-border migrants, Remittances, South Africa (SA), Zimbabwe

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-02: Zero hunger
SDG-03: Good health and well-being

Citation

Thebe, V. 2025, 'When the cross-border remittance system fails : the impact of COVID-19 regulations on the food provision and access for cross-border migrant households in north-western Zimbabwe', Journal of Modern African Studies, vol. 63, no. 3, pp. 207-227, doi : 10.1017/S0022278X25101134.