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‘Joining late': exploring the impact of the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) imposed by South African medical aid schemes

This study explores how black women in paid employment experience the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) that has been imposed on them by the Medical Schemes Act of 1998. Using various theories of citizenship, this research explores ways in which women are still excluded from obtaining full citizenship right...

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Main Author: Moodaley, Natasha
Other Authors: Paremoer, Lauren
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Sociology 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Moodaley, Natasha
author2 Paremoer, Lauren
author_browse Moodaley, Natasha
Paremoer, Lauren
author_facet Paremoer, Lauren
Moodaley, Natasha
author_sort Moodaley, Natasha
collection Thesis
description This study explores how black women in paid employment experience the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) that has been imposed on them by the Medical Schemes Act of 1998. Using various theories of citizenship, this research explores ways in which women are still excluded from obtaining full citizenship rights. The researcher applied a qualitative approach and conducted one-on-one in-depth interviews to generate meaningful data. The findings of the study reveal that women experience work precarity in various forms, which has been heightened by the COVID-19 pandemic. Women are subject to periods of “waithood” with delays that may impact their economic stability and growth. In addition, strong themes of control exerted by medical aids, healthcare practitioners and male partners reinforce the ways in which women are denied full access to citizenship. Furthermore, medical aid is gendered and forces women to organise their productive lives around their reproductive obligations. The LJP revealed no risk for the scheme but appears only to endeavour to exploit those who have been historically marginalised. Moreover, the lack of knowledge of the LJP, the finer details and the long-term implications of joining a medical aid scheme for poorer working-class families are problematic and consistent with current hegemonic practices that reward citizens for fitting into the ideal mould. These findings were then discussed within the theoretical framework of citizenship using Barchiesi's (2007) Theory of Social Citizenship and Brown's (2016) Theory of Sacrificial Citizenship as analytical tools. The research demonstrates that neoliberal policies and legislation punish the poor through a form of poverty tax (LJP) and decrease the ability to generate financial and health security through medical aid scheme subscription. Additionally, the LJP undermines the constitutional promise of equal citizenship by effectively discriminating against citizens on the basis of age, gender and historical disadvantage.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:51.499Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Department of Sociology
publisherStr Department of Sociology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35913 ‘Joining late': exploring the impact of the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) imposed by South African medical aid schemes Moodaley, Natasha Paremoer, Lauren sociology This study explores how black women in paid employment experience the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) that has been imposed on them by the Medical Schemes Act of 1998. Using various theories of citizenship, this research explores ways in which women are still excluded from obtaining full citizenship rights. The researcher applied a qualitative approach and conducted one-on-one in-depth interviews to generate meaningful data. The findings of the study reveal that women experience work precarity in various forms, which has been heightened by the COVID-19 pandemic. Women are subject to periods of “waithood” with delays that may impact their economic stability and growth. In addition, strong themes of control exerted by medical aids, healthcare practitioners and male partners reinforce the ways in which women are denied full access to citizenship. Furthermore, medical aid is gendered and forces women to organise their productive lives around their reproductive obligations. The LJP revealed no risk for the scheme but appears only to endeavour to exploit those who have been historically marginalised. Moreover, the lack of knowledge of the LJP, the finer details and the long-term implications of joining a medical aid scheme for poorer working-class families are problematic and consistent with current hegemonic practices that reward citizens for fitting into the ideal mould. These findings were then discussed within the theoretical framework of citizenship using Barchiesi's (2007) Theory of Social Citizenship and Brown's (2016) Theory of Sacrificial Citizenship as analytical tools. The research demonstrates that neoliberal policies and legislation punish the poor through a form of poverty tax (LJP) and decrease the ability to generate financial and health security through medical aid scheme subscription. Additionally, the LJP undermines the constitutional promise of equal citizenship by effectively discriminating against citizens on the basis of age, gender and historical disadvantage. 2022-03-04T08:53:41Z 2022-03-04T08:53:41Z 2021 2022-03-04T08:53:07Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35913 eng application/pdf Department of Sociology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle sociology
Moodaley, Natasha
‘Joining late': exploring the impact of the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) imposed by South African medical aid schemes
thesis_degree_str Master's
title ‘Joining late': exploring the impact of the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) imposed by South African medical aid schemes
title_full ‘Joining late': exploring the impact of the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) imposed by South African medical aid schemes
title_fullStr ‘Joining late': exploring the impact of the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) imposed by South African medical aid schemes
title_full_unstemmed ‘Joining late': exploring the impact of the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) imposed by South African medical aid schemes
title_short ‘Joining late': exploring the impact of the Late Joiner Penalty (LJP) imposed by South African medical aid schemes
title_sort joining late exploring the impact of the late joiner penalty ljp imposed by south african medical aid schemes
topic sociology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35913
work_keys_str_mv AT moodaleynatasha joininglateexploringtheimpactofthelatejoinerpenaltyljpimposedbysouthafricanmedicalaidschemes