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An exploration of whether the Policy on Financial Awards for Service Providers (Circular no. 17/2004) is a reasonable solution to the subject of welfare service financing

[pg28 is missing] Since 1975 the South African government has struggled to find a suitable way to finance welfare services that would meet both the welfare service providers' and the government's needs. In spite of several policy formulating attempts the solution has still to be found. The most rece...

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Main Author: Lotvonen, Mari Tuulikki
Other Authors: Cooper, David
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Social Development 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Lotvonen, Mari Tuulikki
author2 Cooper, David
author_browse Cooper, David
Lotvonen, Mari Tuulikki
author_facet Cooper, David
Lotvonen, Mari Tuulikki
author_sort Lotvonen, Mari Tuulikki
collection Thesis
description [pg28 is missing] Since 1975 the South African government has struggled to find a suitable way to finance welfare services that would meet both the welfare service providers' and the government's needs. In spite of several policy formulating attempts the solution has still to be found. The most recent policy document regarding welfare service financing is the Policy on Financial Awards to Service Providers (Circular No. 17/2004), which intends to transform the social service delivery system in South Africa. The research undertaken was empirical research, aiming to explore whether welfare organisations in the Western Cape can meet the transformation criteria as stipulated in the Policy on Financial Awards (RSA, 2004a) and obtain funding from sources other than the government. The research sample was selected using the purposive sampling method. Sample selection criteria was that an organisation must have received subsidies from the Provincial Administration Western Cape (PAWC) in the financial year 2003/2004, must employ four or more social workers and the head office must be located in an urban area within the greater Cape Town. Only twenty welfare organisations met the sampling criteria therefore the sample became the research population. All twenty organisations participated in the research, resulting in a one hundred percent (100%) response rate. The research design combined three quantitative and qualitative data collection methods - personal questionnaires developed by the researcher, informal interviews with respondents, and document analysis of audited financial statements for the year 2003/2004. The data was collected between May 2005 and August 2005. One transformation criterion is that welfare organisations' employment profiles must be reflective of the communities they provide services for. Based on the research findings, none of the welfare organisations meet this transformation criterion. If the Policy on Financial Awards is strictly applied, this lack of meeting the criterion is illegal in terms of South African labour legislation. In terms of service provision in rural areas the Policy definition was not precise, but the findings suggest that fifteen organisations (75% of the research population) are likely to face difficulties in meeting this transformation criterion. Based on the analysis of financial statements, seven organisations (35% of the research population) can be considered to be financially sustainable. In terms of obtaining funding from sources other than government the findings suggest that nine organisations (45% of the research population) have adequate fundraising strategies.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:37.404Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
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publisher Department of Social Development
publisherStr Department of Social Development
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40053 An exploration of whether the Policy on Financial Awards for Service Providers (Circular no. 17/2004) is a reasonable solution to the subject of welfare service financing Lotvonen, Mari Tuulikki Cooper, David Social Development [pg28 is missing] Since 1975 the South African government has struggled to find a suitable way to finance welfare services that would meet both the welfare service providers' and the government's needs. In spite of several policy formulating attempts the solution has still to be found. The most recent policy document regarding welfare service financing is the Policy on Financial Awards to Service Providers (Circular No. 17/2004), which intends to transform the social service delivery system in South Africa. The research undertaken was empirical research, aiming to explore whether welfare organisations in the Western Cape can meet the transformation criteria as stipulated in the Policy on Financial Awards (RSA, 2004a) and obtain funding from sources other than the government. The research sample was selected using the purposive sampling method. Sample selection criteria was that an organisation must have received subsidies from the Provincial Administration Western Cape (PAWC) in the financial year 2003/2004, must employ four or more social workers and the head office must be located in an urban area within the greater Cape Town. Only twenty welfare organisations met the sampling criteria therefore the sample became the research population. All twenty organisations participated in the research, resulting in a one hundred percent (100%) response rate. The research design combined three quantitative and qualitative data collection methods - personal questionnaires developed by the researcher, informal interviews with respondents, and document analysis of audited financial statements for the year 2003/2004. The data was collected between May 2005 and August 2005. One transformation criterion is that welfare organisations' employment profiles must be reflective of the communities they provide services for. Based on the research findings, none of the welfare organisations meet this transformation criterion. If the Policy on Financial Awards is strictly applied, this lack of meeting the criterion is illegal in terms of South African labour legislation. In terms of service provision in rural areas the Policy definition was not precise, but the findings suggest that fifteen organisations (75% of the research population) are likely to face difficulties in meeting this transformation criterion. Based on the analysis of financial statements, seven organisations (35% of the research population) can be considered to be financially sustainable. In terms of obtaining funding from sources other than government the findings suggest that nine organisations (45% of the research population) have adequate fundraising strategies. 2024-06-28T12:54:54Z 2024-06-28T12:54:54Z 2005 2024-06-25T12:38:25Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSocSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40053 eng application/pdf Department of Social Development Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Social Development
Lotvonen, Mari Tuulikki
An exploration of whether the Policy on Financial Awards for Service Providers (Circular no. 17/2004) is a reasonable solution to the subject of welfare service financing
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An exploration of whether the Policy on Financial Awards for Service Providers (Circular no. 17/2004) is a reasonable solution to the subject of welfare service financing
title_full An exploration of whether the Policy on Financial Awards for Service Providers (Circular no. 17/2004) is a reasonable solution to the subject of welfare service financing
title_fullStr An exploration of whether the Policy on Financial Awards for Service Providers (Circular no. 17/2004) is a reasonable solution to the subject of welfare service financing
title_full_unstemmed An exploration of whether the Policy on Financial Awards for Service Providers (Circular no. 17/2004) is a reasonable solution to the subject of welfare service financing
title_short An exploration of whether the Policy on Financial Awards for Service Providers (Circular no. 17/2004) is a reasonable solution to the subject of welfare service financing
title_sort exploration of whether the policy on financial awards for service providers circular no 17 2004 is a reasonable solution to the subject of welfare service financing
topic Social Development
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40053
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