1 / 8

EPWP Incentive Grant for Public Works Programmes

The EPWP incentive grant rewards public bodies for creating Full Time Equivalent Jobs (FTEs) and encourages the adoption of labour-intensive methods. It is performance-based and requires public bodies to meet specific targets. The grant is linked to the Municipal Infrastructure Grant (MIG) and aims to improve accountability and transparency in job creation.

aconsuelo
Download Presentation

EPWP Incentive Grant for Public Works Programmes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EXPANDED PUBLIC WORKS PROGRAMMES INCENTIVE GRANT

  2. EPWP INCENTIVE METHOD • The EPWP incentive grant is designed to reward performance with respect to the creation of Full Time Equivalent Jobs [230 days x R50 per day = R11 500] . • Public bodies that create FTE Jobs above their set minimum performance threshold will receive the EPWP incentive grant. • The incentive is therefore entirely performance based and fundamentally different from other conditional grant allocations (which are planning based). • Proposed performance targets have been formulated for all spheres of government and public bodies by National Public Works (as the EPWP lead department) • Performance targets will be formalised with individual public bodies through the signing of agreements in which each public body will commit to a set of targets for the coming years. • The incentive grant will lead to a greater adoption of labour-intensive methods and approaches by public bodies implementing the EPWP. • The incentive is designed to provide additional funds to those public bodies creating more employment using and optimising their available budgets.

  3. EPWP – Infrastructure sector • Public bodies – provincial departments or municipalities are not automatically eligible for the EPWP incentive grant. Specific criteria have been objectively set and consistently applied to categories of public bodies to determine whether a public body is eligible or not. They must: • Meet the reporting requirements • Meet a minimum performance threshold ( minimum number of Full Time Equivalent Jobs that must be created from the infrastructure grant funding allocated (i.e. MIG)) • It is important that the wage incentive is managed, disbursed and used in a manner that is transparent and helps to improve accountability on the EPWP. This means that: • Planning for job creation must be mainstreamed within the existing planning processes for projects and programmes i.e. IDPs. • All EPWP projects identified by eligible public bodies as contributing to their targets and for which the incentive will be claimed, must be registered on the EPWP MIS • Mechanisms must be in place within Treasuries to ensure that disbursements can be easily identified and isolated for payment to the performing public body

  4. MIG objectives • Fully subsidise the capital costs of providing basic services to poor households through the provision of appropriate bulk, connector and internal infrastructure in key services; • Distribute funding for municipal infrastructure in an equitable, transparent and efficient manner which supports a co-ordinated approach to local development and maximises developmental outcomes; • Assist in enhancing the developmental capacity of municipalities, through supporting multi-year planning and budgeting systems; and • Provide a mechanism for the co-ordinated pursuit of national policy priorities with regard to basic municipal infrastructure programmes, while avoiding the duplication and inefficiency associated with sectorally fragmented grants.

  5. MIG - CONDITIONS • Conditions will be applied to ensure that municipalities appropriately address the objectives and parameters of this policy statement mentioned above. • Cross-cutting • Sector Specific Conditions • Division of Revue Act conditions • Compliance monitoring: • The DCoG, acting through the MIG unit is responsible for monitoring the cross-cutting conditions. • Sector departments (DWA, DE, DoE, DoT and DSR) are responsible for monitoring performance of municipalities with regard to sector specific criteria. • DPW is responsible for monitoring the Expanded Public Works criteria (prior project and during implementation) • National Treasury is responsible for monitoring financial reporting and revenue related criteria

  6. MIG • Total labour intensive projects registered for 2010/11 amounts R9,7 billion. • MIG contribution is approx. R7.8 billion (R9,7 billion – 20% own contribution) • MIG and EPWP incentive grants linked – Eligible municipalities that receive MIG and perform can claim from the EPWP incentive grant. • Expenditure performance of the MIG in 2010/11 (86% of R9,5 billion) is a concern as it has an effect on the performance of the EWPW incentive grant. • Performance of Municipalities wrt to the MIG is key to the performance of the EPWP incentive grant as it realtes to the infrastructure sector

  7. EPWP IN MIG • Municipalities identify EPWP projects as per the guidelines • Target of 30% labour component has been set by MIG, which makes it labour intensive • Its important for EPWP to participate in project selection to assist municipalities with compliance to the EPWP guidelines • Once identified the project is registered on the MIG MIS that includes the indicator that the project is a EPWP project. • The project should also be registered on the EPWP MIS which then monitors specific indicators related to the EPWP. • The MIG MIS and EPWP MIS requires improved alignment. • The MIG programme registers EPWP / Labour intensive projects and the values thereof, monitors the status of the projects etc • EPWP monitors the status of EPWP indicators only

  8. EPWP IN MIG • Some municipalities are asking for integration to ensure that MIG MIS and the EPW MIS work optimally. • Improvement of the municipal performance on MIG will contribute towards the performance of the EPWP incentive grant in the infrastructure sector • The increase in quantum of the MIG to address service delivery backlogs could assist job creation. THANK YOU

More Related