South Africa’s constitution promises all citizens access to adequate housing and basic services – water, security, sanitation and electricity. In practice, people from rich to poor experience persistent water cuts, sewage overflows, electricity blackouts and uneven policing. Fiona Anciano, Charlotte Lemanski, Christina Culwick Fatti and Margot Rubin are urban researchers who investigated how and why households in South Africa are going off-grid in almost every way. They speak to The Conversation Africa about the long-term problems that could result from people being compelled to provide their own basic services.
How has service delivery failed in South Africa?
For low-income households, services may be available but too expensive to afford. Government subsidies are too low or inaccessible. For example, in South Africa a free basic monthly amount of electricity is supplied to residents who can prove that they are indigent. But it’s not even enough to power a fridge for one month. And roughly 70% of indigent households don’t receive the free electricity, due to lack of awareness and complex application processes. Even when basic services are delivered, they can be unreliable. In many areas residents don’t know from day to day when, or if, there may be water or power cuts. This is disruptive to everyday life. Middle- and high-income households are frustrated because of the unreliable services that cost more and more. Thus the state is increasingly seen as unable to guarantee electricity, water or adequate policing. There is also a strong sense that service provision is getting worse and that infrastructure failure is becoming more widespread. Electricity shortages, water interruptions, failing sanitation and overstretched policing have become part of daily life.What services have people started to procure for themselves?
Our research investigated how people are providing their own services across four different affluent and poor communities in South Africa. These are Imizamo Yethu (Cape Town), Westlake Village (Cape Town), Parkhurst (Johannesburg) and other affluent households in Cape Town and Johannesburg. Security: Imizamo Yethu is a densely crowded and impoverished low-income shack settlement where unemployment is high. Here residents rely on community patrols for safety and personal security because the police are often absent. Patrols depend on local residents being available. However, residents are determined to secure their safety where the state falls short. At times this may mean using violence to “police” suspected perpetrators. Sanitation and refuse: The one-bedroomed houses in Westlake Village (Cape Town) are state-subsidised and fully serviced (they each have an indoor toilet, electricity and water, plus street lighting and weekly collection of a refuse bin). However, each plot typically hosts about 20 people (in the house and backyard structures accommodating family and tenants). This means one toilet and bin is not enough. Consequently, residents build backyard toilets, illegally dump waste and add rooms to their houses without planning permission. These strategies supplement, rather than fully replace, insufficient state services. Electricity: Parkhurst (Johannesburg) is a wealthy suburb where residents invest individually in private infrastructure like solar panels and boreholes. Households pay a monthly fee for private security companies. The community has even explored managing its own electricity supply as a collective. This signals a deliberate move away from dependence on the municipality.Water: Other affluent households in Cape Town and Johannesburg are increasingly investing in rainwater tanks, drilling boreholes, and recycling bath and dishwashing water. These solutions mark a clear shift towards private control over resources once considered a collective public good.