Poverty and migration in a transformed South Africa

dc.contributor.advisorBooysen, Frederik le Roux
dc.contributor.authorPool, Antonie
dc.date.accessioned2016-11-24T07:09:56Z
dc.date.available2016-11-24T07:09:56Z
dc.date.issuedJan-16
dc.descriptionThesis (Ph.D.(Economics))--University of the Free State, 2016en_ZA
dc.description.abstractAfrikaans: Ten spyte daarvan dat armoede die fokus van baie streeks-, nasionale en internasionale beleidsraamwerke is, leef 54% van die Suid-Afrikaanse bevolking steeds in armoede. Onderwyl dit moeilik is om aan armoede te ontkom, is dit ’n groter uitdaging om die oordrag van armoede tussen generasies te verbreek. Individue en huishoudings wend hulle tot metodes soos migrasie om uit die armoedekringloop te ontsnap. Die doel van die studie was die bestudering van die verband tussen armoededinamika en migrasie in ’n getransformeerde Suid-Afrika. ’n Tweeledige benadering is in die studie gebruik om hierdie verbande te ondersoek. Die eerste benadering het ondersoek ingestel na interhuishoudingsdinamika deur op armoede en die oordrag van intergenerasie-armoede vanaf kern- na dinastiehuishoudings te fokus. Die eerste benadering het ook ondersoek ingestel na migrasie en geldsendings (oordragte) in kern- en dinastiehuishoudings en die invloed daarvan op armoede in dinastiehuishoudings. Die tweede benadering het intradinastiehuishoudingsdinamika verken deur kern- en nie-kernlede in dinastiehuishoudings te vergelyk. Die invloed van die kenmerke van kern- en nie-kernlede op die welsyn van dinastiehuishoudings is ook in hierdie benadering ondersoek. Om hierdie doelwitte te bereik, het die studie gebruik gemaak van die data van die KwaZulu-Natal Income Dynamics Study (KIDS). Die bevindinge van die eerste analitiese benadering dui daarop dat post-apartheid dinastiehuishoudings beter daaraan toe is as hul kern-eweknieë vanweë die hoër gemiddelde en mediaanvlakke van huishoudelike besteding, asook die laer vlakke ten opsigte van die voorkoms, die diepte en die felheid van armoede. Die analise bied bewyse vir die voorkoms van intergenerasie-oordrag van armoede by huishoudings in KwaZulu-Natal. Die waarskynlikheid dat ’n dinastiehuishouding arm sal wees, neem met 40.3% toe indien die huishouding ’n kroniese armoede-agtergrond het. Die bevindinge dui ook op die relatief hoër mobiliteit van kernhuishoudings in die post-apartheid era as vroeër in die laat-apartheid era. Hierdie studie bevestig ook dat migrasie ’n huishoudelike risikoverspreidingstrategie is deurdat dinastiehuishoudings uit ’n kroniese armoede-agtergrond meer waarskynlik is om te migreer, terwyl migrerende dinastiehuishoudings beduidende laer vlakke van armoede as nie-migrerende dinastiehuishoudings ondervind. Die mede-versekeringsmotief vir oordragte is ook bevestig, aangesien dinastiehuishoudings uit ’n kroniese armoede-agtergrond meer waarskynlik is om oordragte te ontvang, terwyl die armoedevlakke ook beduidend laer is in geval van dinastie-huishoudings wat oordragte ontvang. Die bevindings van die tweede analitiese benadering onthul die belangrikheid van intrahuishoudelike dinamika rakende armoede in dinastiehuishoudings. Die bevindings laat blyk dat kern-individue deurslaggewend is vir die voortbestaan van dinastiehuishoudings en waarskynlik ook meer mag bydra tot armoedeverligting in sodanige huishoudings as niekernlede gegewe hul hoër vlakke van opleiding, sosiale kapitaal, arbeidsmarkdeelname en indiensname, asook groter betrokkenheid by oordragte en die ontvangs van maatskaplike toelaes. Die bevindinge van die tweede benadering suggereer ook dat die sosiale kapitaal van familielede belangrik is vir armoedeverligting. Die studie dra by tot die literatuur oor armoede in soverre dit ondersoek instel, enersyds na die verband tussen armoede en armoededinamika en andersyds tussen migrasie en oordragte. Die studie dra ook by tot die literatuur rakende migrasie en oordragte en dra by tot ons begrip van die verband tussen migrasie en die armoededinamika in Suid-Afrikaanse huishoudings.af
dc.description.abstractEnglish: Despite poverty being the focus of many regional, national and international policy frameworks, 54% of the South African population continue to live in poverty. While escaping poverty is admittedly difficult, breaking the intergenerational transmission of poverty constitutes an even bigger challenge. To escape poverty, individuals and households turn to methods such as migration as means of breaking the cycle of poverty. The aim of the study was to investigate the links between poverty dynamics and migration in a transformed South Africa. The study followed a two-pronged approach to investigate these links. The first approach investigated inter-household dynamics by focusing on poverty and on the intergenerational transfer of poverty from core to dynasty households. The first approach moreover investigated migration and remittances in core and dynasty households and their influence on poverty in dynasty households. The second approach explored intradynasty household dynamics by comparing core and non-core members in dynasty households. The influence of core-member- and non-core member characteristics on dynasty household welfare was also investigated in this approach. To achieve the specified aim, this study utilised data generated by the KwaZulu-Natal Income Dynamics Study (KIDS). According to the findings of the first analytical approach, dynasty households in the postapartheid era are better off than their core counterparts by not only having higher average and median levels of household expenditure, but also lower levels of headcount poverty, depth of poverty and severity of poverty. The analysis further supports the existence of the intergenerational transfer (IGT) of poverty in respect of households living in KwaZulu-Natal by increasing the probability that a dynasty will be the poor by 40.3% – if, that is, the household in question comes from a chronically poor background. The findings also indicate that the mobility of core households is relatively higher in the post-apartheid era than earlier on in the late-apartheid era. This study further confirms that migration is a household riskdiversification strategy because dynasty households from chronically poor backgrounds will be more likely to migrate. Migratory dynasty households, on the other hand, demonstrate significantly lower levels of poverty than non-migratory dynasty households. The co-insurance motive for remitting was also confirmed: dynasties from chronically poor backgrounds were found to be more likely to receive remittances and the levels of poverty were moreover significantly lower for dynasty households receiving remittances. The findings of the second analytical approach reveal the importance of intra-household dynamics in respect of poverty in dynasty households. The results suggest that core individuals are crucial for the survival of dynasty households and stand to contribute more to poverty alleviation in dynasty households than do non-core household members in that core individuals enjoy higher levels of education and of social capital, they are in the labour force, are employed and are involved in remittance flows and they also receive social transfers from government. The findings of the second approach further suggest that the social capital provided by family members is important in respect of poverty alleviation. This study contributes to the literature on poverty in that it, on the one hand investigates the linkages between poverty and poverty dynamics and, on the other, migration and remittances. This study also contributes to the literature on migration and remittance flows and adds to our understanding of how migration relates to poverty dynamics in South African households.en_ZA
dc.description.sponsorshipNational Research Foundation (NRF)en_ZA
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11660/4787
dc.language.isoenen_ZA
dc.publisherUniversity of the Free Stateen_ZA
dc.rights.holderUniversity of the Free Stateen_ZA
dc.subjectPoverty -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.titlePoverty and migration in a transformed South Africaen_ZA
dc.typeThesisen_ZA
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