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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.
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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.
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
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.
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
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
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
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