Type | Journal Article - State of the nation |
Title | Pro-poor rural development in South Africa |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2014 |
Page numbers | 158-170 |
URL | http://pmg-assets.s3-website-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/160405hsrcProPoor.pdf |
Abstract | The National Development Plan (NDP) boldly asserts that it seeks to contribute towards achieving the objectives of the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP). Invoking connections between the NDP 2030 and the RDP takes place amid ongoing debates about continuities and discontinuities in rural development policies nearly two decades since the end of apartheid in 1994 (Hebinck, Fay and Kondlo 2011; Jara and Hall 2009; Sender 2012). In the pre-1994 era, as has been widely acknowledged, rural South Africa was deliberately starved of adequate investment – especially in the former bantustans. Consequently, rural areas were entrapped in extreme underdevelopment and impoverishment. In the post-apartheid era, the volume and impact of investment for the eradication of rural deprivation and marginalisation thus became a focal point, irrespective of whether such investments would originate from government or non-state sources. However, commentary was not restricted to how much role-players were investing in rural areas. The type and form of such investment, ranging from land reform and smallholder farming, to education and skills development, to housing and social infrastructure, and to participatory forms of local governance, among other routes out of rural poverty, did not escape critical scrutiny |
» | South Africa - General Household Survey 2012 |