As SA awaits the nationalbudget speechon Wednesday, the debate is already framed around familiar themes: fiscal consolidation, debt stabilisation and constrained revenue. These are legitimate concerns. But the deeper question is whether this budget will meaningfully shift the development model toward communities, where unemployment, hunger and climate shocks are most acutely felt.
A credible budget in 2026 cannot be based solely on spreadsheets. It must rebalance power and investment toward the local economies that sustain the majority of South Africans. For too long, our fiscal framework has leaned heavily toward centralised programmes and capital-intensive infrastructure, often with weak linkages to local employment creation.
While infrastructure investment remains essential, it cannot change targeted support of smallholder farmers, township enterprises, youth cooperatives and community-based organisations. These actors generate high employment multipliers per rand spent and anchor economic resilience at the household level. In rural districts and peri-urban settlements, food insecurity is not an abstract statistic; it is a daily reality.
Read Full Article on The Sowetan
[paywall]
Budget allocations must therefore treat community-based agriculture, irrigation schemes, agro-processing hubs and extension services as core economic investments, not peripheral social programmes. Strengthening local food systems reduces vulnerability to price shocks, creates jobs and improves nutritional outcomes. It is a fiscally prudent intervention with measurable social returns.
Youth unemploymentremains SA’s most destabilising economic fault line. Temporary public employment programmes provide relief, but they are not structural solutions, particularly when they are short-term, intermittent and disconnected from sustainable livelihood pathways. These programmes must be extended in duration and redesigned to provide longer-term security, skills deepening, and opportunities for transition into enterprise or formal employment.
A community-centred budget should expand enterprise-linked grants, ringfence procurement for youth-owned businesses and scale digital and green economy initiatives that create asset-building pathways rather than dependency cycles. If the just energy transition is to mean anything beyond policy rhetoric, it must include community ownership models in renewable energy, waste management, and climate adaptation projects. Otherwise, the green economy risks replicating the inequalities of the old one.
Climate adaptation itself must move from conference commitments to ward-level implementation. Floods, droughts and extreme weather events disproportionately affect small-scale farmers and informal settlements.
[/paywall]
All Zim News – Bringing you the latest news and updates.