Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T19:58:52.310Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Labour, laziness and distribution: work imaginaries among the South African unemployed

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 March 2020

Abstract

A wealth of new writing has emerged around the future of labour, focusing on thinking beyond employment in imagining the futures of ‘surplus populations’ no longer needed by labour markets. These new imaginaries include radically expanded forms of redistribution, such as unconditional cash transfers or universal basic income. But what are the views of the ‘surplus populations’ themselves? This article uses ethnographic research in an informal settlement in South Africa to understand why the unemployed or precariously employed poor are themselves often reluctant to delink labour and income. In particular, we focus on the discursive use of ‘laziness’ by urban unemployed young men. The varied (and often contradictory) ways in which these men employ the laziness discourse sheds light on the logics linking waged work and money in our informants’ social imaginaries. It illuminates the underlying contradictions and complexities of such logics, including those of gender, relational obligations, expectations of citizenship, and the inevitable tensions between aspirational hopes and economic realities. To begin thinking ‘beyond the proper job’, to use Ferguson and Li's phrase, we must unravel and understand such nuanced logics that continue to bind together hard work, deservingness and cash – even for those left out of labour markets.

Résumé

Résumé

L'avenir du travail fait l'objet de nombreux nouveaux écrits portant sur une réflexion qui sort du cadre de l'emploi pour imaginer les futurs de « populations excédentaires » dont les marchés du travail n'ont plus besoin. Ces nouveaux imaginaires incluent des formes de redistribution radicalement étendues comme le transfert monétaire inconditionnel ou le revenu universel de base. Mais qu'en pensent ces « populations excédentaires » ? Cet article s'appuie sur des études ethnographiques menées en Afrique du Sud dans un peuplement informel pour comprendre pourquoi les sans-travail ou les travailleurs précaires pauvres sont souvent eux-mêmes réticents à découpler le travail du revenu. Les auteurs s'intéressent en particulier à l'utilisation discursive de la « paresse » par des jeunes urbains sans emploi. Les manières diverses (et souvent contradictoires) dont ces jeunes utilisent le discours de la paresse apportent un éclairage sur la logique liant le travail salarié et l'argent dans les imaginaires sociaux des informateurs. L'article met en lumière les contradictions et les complexités sous-jacentes de cette logique, y compris celles de genre, d'obligations relationnelles et d'attentes de citoyenneté, et les tensions inévitables entre espoirs aspirationnels et réalités économiques. Pour commencer à réfléchir « au-delà du vrai travail », en utilisant la phrase de Ferguson et Li, il faut élucider et comprendre cette logique nuancée qui continue à associer le travail, le mérite et l'argent, même pour ceux que les marchés du travail ont mis à l’écart.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

H. J. Dawson and E. Fouksman contributed equally to this article.

References

Alexander, P., Ceruti, C., Motseke, K., Phadi, M. and Wale, K. (2013) Class in Soweto. Scottsville: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press.Google Scholar
Altman, M. and Valodia, I. (2006) ‘Where to for the South African labour market? Some “big issues”’, Transformation: Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa 60 (1): 15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barchiesi, F. (2007a) ‘South African debates on the basic income grant: wage labour and the post-apartheid social policy’, Journal of Southern African Studies 33 (3): 561–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barchiesi, F. (2007b) ‘Wage labor and social citizenship in the making of post-apartheid South Africa’, Journal of Asian and African Studies 42 (1): 3972.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barchiesi, F. (2008) ‘Wage labor, precarious employment, and social inclusion in the making of South Africa's post-apartheid transition’, African Studies Review 51 (2): 119–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barchiesi, F. (2011) Precarious Liberation: workers, the state, and contested social citizenship in post-apartheid South Africa. New York NY: State University of New York Press.Google Scholar
Bastagli, F., Hagen-Zanker, J., Harman, L., Barca, V., Sturge, G. and Schmidt, T. with Pellerano, L. (2016) Cash Transfers: what does the evidence say? A rigorous review of programme impact and of the role of design and implementation features. London: Overseas Development Institute (ODI).Google Scholar
Bezuidenhout, A. and Fakier, K. (2006) ‘Maria's burden: contract cleaning and the crisis of social reproduction in post-apartheid South Africa’, Antipode 38 (3): 462–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bolt, M. (2013) ‘The dynamics of dependence’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 19 (2): 243–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Budlender, D. and Fauvelle-Aymar, C. (2014) ‘Migration and employment in South Africa: statistical and econometric analyses of internal and international migrants in Statistics South Africa's labour market data’. MiWORC Policy Brief 2. Johannesburg: Migration for Work Research Consortium (MiWORC).Google Scholar
Casale, D. and Posel, D. (2002) ‘The continued feminisation of the labour force in South Africa’, South African Journal of Economics 70 (1): 156–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, H. (2014a) ‘Patronage from below: political unrest in an informal settlement in South Africa’, African Affairs 113 (453): 518–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, H. (2014b) ‘Youth politics: waiting and envy in a South African informal settlement’, Journal of Southern African Studies 40 (4): 861–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, H. J. (2019) ‘The productivity of unemployment: emerging forms of work and life in urban South Africa’. PhD thesis, School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography, University of Oxford.Google Scholar
Dubbeld, B. (2013) ‘How social security becomes social insecurity: unsettled households, crisis talk and the value of grants in a KwaZulu-Natal village’, Acta Juridica 1: 197217.Google Scholar
Du Toit, A. and Neves, D. (2007) ‘In search of South Africa's “second economy”’, Africanus: Journal of Development Studies 37 (2): 145–74.Google Scholar
Ebrahim, A., Leibbrandt, M. and Ranchhod, V. (2017) ‘The effects of the Employment Tax Incentive on South African employment’. WIDER Working Paper 2017/5. Helsinki: United Nations University World Institute for Development Economics Research (UN-WIDER) <https://www.wider.unu.edu/sites/default/files/wp2017-5.pdf>, accessed 31 October 2019.CrossRef,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Essop, R. (2016) ‘EFF gives sleeping MPs rude awakening’, Eye Witness News, 4 May <https://ewn.co.za/2016/05/04/EFF-gives-sleeping-MPs-rude-awakening>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (2009) ‘The uses of neoliberalism’, Antipode 41 (S1): 166–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferguson, J. (2013) ‘Declarations of dependence: labour, personhood, and welfare in Southern Africa’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 19 (2): 223–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferguson, J. (2015) Give a Man a Fish: reflections on the new politics of distribution. Durham NC and London: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferguson, J. and Li, T. M. (2018) ‘Beyond the “proper job”: political-economic analysis after the century of labouring man’. Working Paper 51. Cape Town: Institute for Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies, University of the Western Cape.Google Scholar
Ferreira, L. (2015) ‘Social grants in South Africa: separating myth from reality’. Africa Check factsheet, 2 May <http://africacheck.org/factsheets/separating-myth-from-reality-a-guide-to-social-grants-in-south-africa/>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Fouksman, E. (2017a) ‘The new labour struggle: less work, same pay, and basic income for all’, The Conversation, 4 May <https://theconversation.com/the-new-labour-struggle-less-work-same-pay-and-basic-income-for-all-76903>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Fouksman, E. (2017b) ‘Universal basic income: a radical post-labour agenda’, South African Labour Bulletin 41 (3): 2830.Google Scholar
Fouksman, E. and Klein, E. (2019) ‘Radical transformation or technological intervention? Two paths for universal basic income’, World Development 122: 492500.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gorz, A. (1999) Reclaiming Work: beyond the wage-based society. Cambridge: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Gumede, W. (2015) ‘Rent-seeking is gobbling up our economy’, Mail and Guardian, 11 September <https://mg.co.za/article/2015-09-10-rent-seeking-is-gobbling-up-our-economy>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Hanlon, J., Barrientos, A. and Hulme, D. (2010) Just Give Money to the Poor: the development revolution from the global South. Sterling VA: Kumarian Press.Google Scholar
Hickel, J. (2014) ‘“Xenophobia” in South Africa: order, chaos, and the moral economy of witchcraft’, Cultural Anthropology 29 (1): 103–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hochfeld, T. and Plagerson, S. (2011) ‘Dignity and stigma among South African female cash transfer recipients’, IDS Bulletin 42 (6): 53–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houle, C. (2019) ‘Social mobility and political instability’, Journal of Conflict Resolution 63 (1): 85111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hull, E. and James, D. (2012) ‘Introduction: popular economies in South Africa’, Africa 82 (1): 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, M. (2010) Love in the Time of AIDS: inequality, gender, and rights in South Africa. Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Hunter, M. (2011) ‘Beneath the “Zunami”: Jacob Zuma and the gendered politics of social reproduction in South Africa’, Antipode 43 (4): 1102–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ILO (2012) Social Security for All: building social protection floors and comprehensive social security systems. The strategy of the International Labour Organization. Geneva: International Labour Organization (ILO), Social Security Department.Google Scholar
James, D. (2015) Money from Nothing: indebtedness and aspiration in South Africa. Stanford CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Jeske, C. (2016) ‘This is not working: South African unemployment and competing narratives of a good life’. PhD thesis, University of Wisconsin-Madison.Google Scholar
Jeske, C. (2018) ‘Why work? Do we understand what motivates work-related decisions in South Africa?’, Journal of Southern African Studies 44 (1): 2742.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jeske, C. (forthcoming) The Laziness Myth: and other narratives of work and the good life in South Africa. Ithaca NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Jones, G. (2012) ‘Questions raised over job seekers’ grant’. Mail and Guardian, 5 August <http://mg.co.za/article/2012-08-05-questions-raised-over-job-seekers-grant>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Kenny, B. and Webster, E. (1998) ‘Eroding the core: flexibility and the re-segmentation of the South African labour market’, Critical Sociology 24 (3): 216–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kingdon, G. and Knight, J. (2001) ‘What have we learnt about unemployment from microdatasets in South Africa?’, Social Dynamics 27 (1): 7995.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, T. M. (2010) ‘To make live or let die? Rural dispossession and the protection of surplus populations’, Antipode 41 (1): 6693.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, T. M. (2013) ‘Jobless growth and relative surplus populations’, Anthropology Today 29 (3): 12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, T. M. (2017) ‘After development: surplus population and the politics of entitlement’, Development and Change 48 (6): 1247–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marais, H. (2018) ‘The employment crisis, just transition and the universal basic income grant’ in Satgar, V. (ed.), The Climate Crisis: South African and global democratic eco-socialist alternatives. Johannesburg: Wits University Press.Google Scholar
Matisonn, H. and Seekings, J. (2003) ‘Welfare in wonderland? The politics of the basic income grant in South Africa, 1996–2002’ in Standing, G. and Samson, M. (eds), The Basic Income Grant in South Africa. Cape Town: UCT Press.Google Scholar
Molatlhwa, O. (2015) ‘JZ: if I were a dictator’, The Times, 25 March <https://www.timeslive.co.za/thetimes/2015/03/25/jz-if-i-were-a-dictator>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Moodie, T. D. (1994) Going for Gold: men, mines, and migration. Berkeley CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Mosoetsa, S. (2011) Eating from One Pot: the dynamics of survival in poor South African households. Johannesburg: Wits University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murray, C. (1994 [1984]) Losing Ground: American social policy, 1950–1980. New York NY: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Orthofer, A. (2016) ‘Wealth inequality in South Africa: evidence from survey and tax data’. REDI3 × 3 Working Paper 15. Cape Town: Research Project on Employment, Income Distribution and Inclusive Growth, Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit (SALDRU), University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Philip, K. (2010) ‘Inequality and economic marginalisation: how the structure of the economy impacts on opportunities on the margins’, Law, Democracy and Development 14 (1): 128.Google Scholar
Pressly, D. (2015) ‘R3.3bn plan to extend child support grant to 21 on cards’, Fin24, 16 March <https://www.fin24.com/Economy/R33bn-child-care-grant-extension-to-21-on-cards-20150316>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Ranchhod, V. and Finn, A. (2015) ‘Estimating the effects of South Africa's youth employment tax incentive – an update’. SALDRU Working Paper 152. Cape Town: Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit (SALDRU), University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Sapa (2014) ‘Our people are not used to standing up and doing things: Zuma’, Sowetan, 20 October < https://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2014/10/20/our-people-are-not-used-to-standing-up-and-doing-things-zuma>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Seekings, J. (2008) ‘Deserving individuals and groups’, Transformation 68: 2852.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seekings, J. and Matisonn, H. (2012) ‘The continuing politics of basic income in South Africa’ in Murray, M. and Pateman, C. (eds), Basic Income Worldwide: horizons of reform: basic income solutions around the world. London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Seekings, J. and Nattrass, N. (2005) Class, Race, and Inequality in South Africa. New Haven CT: Yale University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seekings, J. and Nattrass, N. (2015) Policy, Politics and Poverty in South Africa. New York NY: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shisana, O., Labadarios, D., Rehle, T., Simbayi, L., Zuma, K., Dhansay, A., Reddy, P., Parker, W., Hoosain, E., Naidoo, P., Hongoro, C., Mchiza, Z., Steyn, N. P., Dwane, N., Makoae, M., Maluleke, T., Ramlagan, S., Zungu, N., Evans, M. G., Jacobs, L., Faber, M. and SANHANES-1 Team (2013) South African National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (SANHANES-1). Cape Town: HSRC Press.Google Scholar
Skinner, C. and Valodia, I. (2001) ‘Globalisation and women's work in South Africa: national and local approaches to economic transformation’, Agenda 16 (48): 7589.Google Scholar
Southall, R. (2016) The New Black Middle Class in South Africa. Woodbridge and Rochester NY: James Currey.Google Scholar
Standing, G. (2009) Work after Globalization: building occupational citizenship. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Standing, G. and Samson, M. (2003) A Basic Income Grant for South Africa. Cape Town: University of Cape Town Press.Google Scholar
StatsSA (2011) Census 2011. Pretoria: Statistics South Africa (StatsSA).Google Scholar
StatsSA (2016) The Social Profile of Youth, 2009–2014. Pretoria: Statistics South Africa (StatsSA).Google Scholar
StatsSA (2017) Poverty Trends in South Africa: an examination of absolute poverty between 2006 and 2015. Pretoria: Statistics South Africa (StatsSA).Google Scholar
StatsSA (2019) Quarterly Labour Force Survey, Quarter 2: 2019. Pretoria: Statistics South Africa (StatsSA).Google Scholar
Sterken, H. (2010) ‘“Boundary work” in the process of informal job seeking: an ethnographic study of Cape Town roadside workseekers’. MA thesis, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Steyn, L. (2015) ‘Analysts split over wage subsidy’, Mail and Guardian, 27 November <https://mg.co.za/article/2015-11-27-00-analysts-split-over-wage-subsidy>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Tangri, R. and Southall, R. (2008) ‘The politics of black economic empowerment in South Africa’, Journal of Southern African Studies 34 (3): 699716.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, E. P. (1967) ‘Time, work-discipline, and industrial capitalism’, Past and Present 38 (1): 5697.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trading Economics (2018) ‘South Africa GDP per capita PPP’ <https://tradingeconomics.com/south-africa/gdp-per-capita-ppp>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Van Rensburg, D. (2016) ‘Gordhan: youth wage subsidy will continue’, City Press, 31 July <https://city-press.news24.com/Business/gordhan-youth-wage-subsidy-will-continue-20160729>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
von Holdt, K. (2013) ‘South Africa: the transition to violent democracy’, Review of African Political Economy 40 (138): 589604.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weber, M. (2009 [1930]) The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism with Other Writings on the Rise of the West. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Weeks, K. (2011) The Problem with Work: feminism, Marxism, antiwork politics, and postwork imaginaries. Durham NC: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Bank (2015) ‘Should we just give cash’, World Bank, 22 October <https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2015/10/20/should-we-just-give-cash>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
World Bank (2016) ‘GINI index (World Bank estimate)’ <https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/si.pov.gini>, accessed 31 October 2019.,+accessed+31+October+2019.>Google Scholar
Zizzamia, R. (2018) ‘Is employment a panacea for poverty in South Africa? A mixed-methods investigation’. MPhil thesis, Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford.Google Scholar
Zizzamia, R., Schotte, S., Leibbrandt, M. and Ranchhod, V. (2016) ‘Vulnerability and the middle class in South Africa’. SALDRU Working Paper 188/NIDS Discussion Paper 2016/15. Cape Town: Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit (SALDRU), University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Zulu, P. (1991) ‘Legitimating the culture of survival’ in Preston-White, E. and Rogerson, C. (eds), South Africa's Informal Economy. Cape Town: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar