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Issues Paper No. 31
SOCIO-ECONOMIC
CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF THE HIV EPIDEMIC IN SOUTHERN
AFRICA:
A CASE STUDY OF NAMIBIA
Desmond Cohen
INTRODUCTION
Part
1: Socio-economic Causes of the HIV Epidemic
1. The Roles of Income, Occupational Status and Poverty
2. Economic Organisation and Public Policy
3. Social Organisation, Gender and Public Policy
4. Social Learning
Part
2: Estimating Demographic and Developmental Impacts - a
Case Study of Namibia
Epidemiological Situation in Southern Africa
Demographic Effects of HIV and AIDS
Estimating the Impact of HIV and AIDS on Human
Development
Results
Comments
Part
3 : Estimating Sectoral Impacts of the Epidemic in
Namibia
1. Households
2. Productive Sectors
Conclusions
INTRODUCTION
This paper
is in three parts. Part 1 reviews in a schematic way
existing knowledge of the socio-economic causes and
consequences of the HIV epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa.
Part 2 looks more closely at the socio-economic impact of
the epidemic on Southern Africa. Analysis is focused on
Namibia as a specific case study, within a framework
which addresses both demographic and developmental
impacts. Estimates are presented on the effects of the
epidemic on human development, the UNDP Human Development
Index, for both Southern Africa and for Namibia. Part 3
is a review of the impact on economic sectors in Namibia.
It needs to be stressed at the outset that much of the
applied research on socio-economic causes and
consequences of the HIV epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa
has yet to be done. This is even more true in Namibia
where the absence of appropriate policy and programme
related research imposes severe constraints on effective
responses to the epidemic. It is thus a priority area for
Namibia and for other countries in the region to
strengthen national capacity for undertaking applied
policy and programme relevant research on the epidemic.
It has to be stressed that such research on both the
causes and consequences of the epidemic needs to be
timely -- the problems to be addressed are important --
but are generally everywhere under-recognised. There has
been a fair amount of research undertaken in some
countries in the region but this has often been of low
value to those with policy and programme
responsibilities. This can be avoided from the outset
through appropriately designed strategies for undertaking
socio-economic research on the epidemic.
Part 1: SOCIO-ECONOMIC CAUSES OF THE HIV
EPIDEMIC
More than ten years into the global HIV epidemic there is
still great unclarity as to the precise importance of
different factors in explaining both the levels and the
distribution of HIV infection in Africa. About 70% or
more of total HIV infections globally are in sub-Saharan
Africa, with some 90% of all infections concentrated in
developing countries. The distribution of global
infections will change in the next 5 to 10 years as the
share of the total which is African shrinks as Asia
experiences a growth in HIV transmission. It was already
the case in 1997 that about one half of new infections
worldwide were in Asia, a trend which is expected to
deepen in the coming years. There is some very
preliminary evidence which suggests that in a number of
countries in sub-Saharan Africa the epidemic may be
stabilising. But it is also the case that rural rates of
HIV infection in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa are
moving closer to urban rates (which have typically always
been higher).
The issue to be addressed is why HIV infection has been
so concentrated in the past-decade in sub-Saharan Africa,
more especially in Eastern, Southern and Central Africa?
What have been the dynamics of the various sub-epidemics,
and what role have social and economic factors played in
the development of the epidemic? Socio-economic and
cultural factors appear to have been significant in
explaining HIV transmission throughout the region. The
process in the following discussion is partly inductive
and partly empirical, with the ultimate objective of
identifying those factors which are amenable to policy
and programme response. In no sense is this a fully
comprehensive analysis of the issues. The aim is to
deepen understanding of those factors which seem to be
important in explaining what is happening to the HIV
epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa and more particularly in
Namibia.
1. The
Roles of Income, Occupational Status and Poverty
The poor account absolutely for the largest numbers of
those infected with HIV. But the relationship with
poverty is by no means simple and many of the poor, even
the poorest of the poor, remain uninfected in many
countries. Furthermore, and this is very important and to
some extent reasonably well documented, HIV infection is
also high among those who are better educated and highly
trained. The epidemic is thus bi-modal in its
distribution with peaks in both the poorest segments of
the population BUT also amongst the richest and best
educated. So the relationship cannot simply run from
poverty to behaviours which expose individuals and their
families to HIV infection because there are the non-poor
who also exhibit risk behaviours which can and do lead to
HIV infection. The non-poor in Africa are the region's
most scarce resource who are essential for the effective
governance of their countries and who play essential
economic and social roles. As will be seen in a later
Section, the fact that HIV infection is also present
amongst the most economically favoured - with high levels
of HIV prevalence in some countries - will lead to
substantial economic losses through the erosion of
Africa's most able and most educated segment of the
population.
So quite different factors other than poverty must be
operating in the cases of the skilled, professional and
the well educated to explain their behaviours. These are
clearly not behaviours which are income constrained (as
are those of the poor) nor are they behaviours which can
be simply attributed to lack of information on how HIV is
transmitted and how it can be prevented. For these are
among the educated elite of the region who have absorbed
many years of schooling often subsidised by the State.
Rather the explanation would seem to lie in the
opportunities which are available to these groups through
their access to income and their position in society to
engage in sexual behaviours which place themselves and
their spouses at risk of HIV infection. Such groups seem
also to be characterised by patterns of employment which
include high levels of mobility, and it would seem that
this is a feature of their life style which provides an
additional opportunity for unsafe sex. For this group it
is certainly not poverty which explains their behaviour
but the opposite; nor can behaviour be attributed to lack
of access to education since many have achieved both
secondary and often tertiary levels; but it does seem to
be related to work and leisure patterns, and with high
levels of labour mobility. There is even some evidence
that HIV infection rises with the level of education and
occupational status which is quite the opposite of what
might have been expected given the widespread assumption
that knowledge empowers. Typically, the spouses of men
who are HIV positive are themselves often infected
(husbands infecting wives seems the more normal case).
In the
case of the poor who are infected with the virus the
evidence is less counter intuitive. Poverty will lead to
economic strategies which expose the poor to risks of HIV
infection. Thus both men and women will seek out
livelihoods which offer the possibility of survival, and
this will often require migration from villages to towns
and cities in search of jobs. Doing so will often lead to
relaxation of traditional norms of behaviour and in the
case of men particularly will often lead to sexual
activity where they have many partners. But poor women,
especially those who head poor households who are many in
Africa, will also engage in sexual transactions so as to
support their families. This exposes such women, who
cannot be categorised at all as being CSWs, to risks of
HIV infection. For some women the pressures of poverty
for them and their families may lead to activities which
can be classed as those of a CSW, but even for this group
of women it is not simply and only poverty which explains
their actions. It should be recalled that HIV infection
is higher amongst women than men in Africa and is very
much higher amongst young women and girls than amongst
their male counterparts. Evidence supports the
proposition that most married women who are infected with
HIV have only a single partner - their husband. It
follows that changing the behaviour of both men and women
is essential for reducing further HIV transmission -
changes cannot be confined to only one gender.
There are many other factors also operating in the case
of the poorest. They have generally poor health status
which is the outcome of their poverty and their lack of
access since childhood to those things which determine
health status. In part, this is a matter of access to
formal sector health services but it is much more a
matter of environmental conditions (such as poor housing,
clean water and poor nutrition). Addressing these
environmental aspects of the life of the poorest will
have significant effects both on health status as well as
on their labour productivity, for low output per person
is often related to poor health. These conditions are
true irrespective of gender but seem to be severest for
girls and women which may in part explain their greater
susceptibility to HIV infection than males. What is
undoubtedly clear is that women receive less health care
than men generally and the failure to treat STDs in women
is indeed a major problem given the link between STDs and
HIV transmission. Poor health status of both men and
women in part explains the more rapid progression from
HIV infection to death for those who are HIV positive in
Africa compared with rich countries - compounded in the
case of women by excessive numbers of pregnancies. This
evidence leads to important policy conclusions for
Namibia which are summarised below.
Finally, there is the issue of access to and the quality
of the education received by the poorest. In spite of
major efforts by many countries in Africa, there still
remains a major educational deficit. The recent decade
has seen a worsening of the effective education received
by the poorest in many countries, which reflects public
policy decisions under conditions of constrained
resources. Particularly severe in countries following
structural adjustment policies, but also reflecting
increasing demands caused by a rapidly increasing and
youthful population. One consequence is a perpetuation of
poverty associated with little or no education, and
another is illiteracy for many Africans, which compounds
their problems of full participation in civil society.
2. Economic Organisation and Public Policy
This is a
categorisation which covers many factors which seem to
have had an influence on the dynamics of the HIV
epidemic. Their particular role is difficult to identify
and assess but they have some importance. Thus it is
evident that patterns of labour mobility and migration
are affected by particular economic strategies, and that
mobility of labour plays an important role in the
transmission of HIV throughout the region. But economic
strategies can be modified and be different and in a
world of HIV it is important to re-examine those being
followed by a country. Thus most countries in Africa have
pursued economic and social policies which are urban
biased - favouring those who live and work in cities to
the disadvantage of rural populations. These biases in
policies and in access to public services are factors in
the transmission of HIV and thus the spread of the
epidemic.
Rural to urban migration has been in part the consequence
of the imbalance between living standards, access to
education and health and to employment that exists.
Different allocations of public resources in favour of
poorer rural populations, especially in education and
health, and different pro-agricultural strategies
(different exchange rate policies, improved access to
credit, better transport infrastructure, rural
development, and so on) would have major effects on the
mobility of labour and on rural poverty. Of particular
importance is the need to improve employment
opportunities for adolescent youth - both boys and girls
in rural and urban settings. There are many instruments
of public policy which can be used to raise employment
for young people and this could be a potent force for
affecting positively their sexual and other behaviours.
Many countries in the region have followed policies of
structural adjustment which have had the effect of
generating additional unemployment, particularly for
workers in the public sector. These policies have
disproportionately reduced expenditures on health and
education along with other social sector spending. As
such, the SAPs have added to more general forces at work
over the past two decades which have caused widespread
social distress and rising unemployment together with
reduced access to essential social services. Governments
have had few degrees of freedom to change some of the
factors at work (such as an adverse external environment
for trade) but that is not to say that they have no
independence of policy making.
In particular, they have had the capacity to change
public expenditure allocations in ways that would have
prevented much of the deterioration in essential public
services such as education and health. They have also had
choices in terms of the allocation of expenditure within
broad functional categories, and could at any time have
redistributed expenditure to primary health (away from
acute/hospital care), and to primary and secondary
education (with less for very expensive and highly
subsidised tertiary education). More broadly, there has
always existed the choice of using public services as a
vehicle for redistribution in favour of the poor and away
from the rich. This they have failed to accomplish and
they have through their policies helped to maintain and
to expand those underlying factors which have contributed
to the epidemic - such as poverty, poor and unequal
access to key public services, and too little provision
for primary health and basic education for all.
In part,
economic development in the region has been dependent for
far too long on families being disrupted through the
migration of family members in search of employment. This
is most evident in the case of mining where recruitment
of male workers without their families has been only too
typical. These employment practices have been important
in the spread of HIV not only for the miners but also to
their wives and their rural communities. But what is most
obviously true of mining is only an example of the more
general problem with development which is a failure to
locate employment closer to where people live. This is
not inevitable, and in a world of HIV and AIDS it is
necessary to revisit policies for industrial and
agricultural development. This is also true for large
scale infrastructure developments which have the effect
of generating localised flows of migrant labour with
consequences in terms of HIV transmission which are only
too evident. It is possible to build into such
developments an awareness of their effects on the
epidemic, and to design appropriate interventions to
limit the spread of infection within the work force and
local communities.
3.
Social Organisation, Gender and Public Policy
This is a massive topic and the following represents only
a few but important observations on issues which are not
generally well documented. The easiest is Gender where
there now exists considerable evidence on the role that
male and female relationships play in the epidemic. As
has been noted several times already, women now outnumber
men in terms of HIV infection in Africa; young women have
rates of HIV infection several orders of magnitude higher
than their male counterparts, and most married women in
Africa who are infected with HIV say that they have only
had a single partner - their spouse. At the heart of this
heartrending picture are relationships between men and
women - not simply sexual relationships important though
these are in terms of the epidemic. Evidence suggests
that where women are not valued, and where they are
largely excluded from protection of their rights as full
members of society that the epidemic flourishes. This is
often reflected in unequal access to education for women,
unequal access to credit, a lack of protection under the
law for women's property, the continuing treatment of
women as chattels to be disposed of at the will of their
husbands, discrimination in access to health services,
and so on. All of these matters can be remedied by
appropriate public policy although to achieve this there
may have to be firstly changes in women's access to
political power. This is itself amenable to policy and is
unlikely to happen unless there is action by men to
include women in the processes of civil society. But
happen they must if the present rates of HIV infection of
both men and women are to be reduced.
Related to the foregoing are issues of inequality between
men and women and between different social classes. It
appears that HIV infection is higher where the economic
gaps separating men and women are greatest. Addressing
these sources of gender inequality thus becomes an
important area for social and economic policy. It is also
the case that social stratification can be a source of
inactive social and economic policy as those with power
(the rich) follow policies in their own interest to the
neglect of the rest of the population. Thus policies will
be followed that are to the benefit of the rich (in
economic matters generally, in access to credit, in
employment, in education and in health provision, and so
on). The exercise of such powers often continued after
the formal passing of power to the rest of the population
as democratisation has occurred in Africa, with the old
elites continuing to set the policy agenda in their own
interest.
The power of self-interest in combination with continuing
misconceptions about the HIV epidemic have been part of
the problem in sub-Saharan Africa. One explanation of the
rapid process of transmission in South Africa was that
the former colonial government was simply uninterested in
taking appropriate responses to the epidemic as it
emerged. It seemed to the government to be an irrelevance
given their particular class interests and so they failed
to institute effective policies and programmes at the
time that it was essential that they do so. This legacy
is apparent both in RSA and in Namibia, and through
relationships with other "dependent" economies
in the region in other countries as well. Once the
epidemic reaches a prevalence rate of 3-4% it is then
exceedingly difficult to rein-in the subsequent rise in
HIV infection. All the countries in the region are having
to live with the consequences of the initial failures of
Government in RSA to act decisively and early in relation
to the epidemic. It should be noted that class economic
interests can continue to prevent effective policy and
programme responses, for the latter will often require
fundamental changes in relations within civil society.
4. Social Learning
This can be brief although it is at the heart of an
effective response to the epidemic. In the early days of
the HIV epidemic in Africa, it was assumed that HIV
infection was confined to core groups in the population -
to those with immoral behaviours such as CSWs and their
clients. In time, this perception of the epidemic has
changed, although not everywhere. Clearly it does not
make sense to think of the HIV epidemic in terms of
"high risk groups" where 20, 30 or 40% of
adults are infected as is now unfortunately the case in
many countries and cities in the region. The HIV epidemic
needs to be perceived as the responsibility of all -
young and old, the poor and the rich, the governors and
the governed, and men and women. But this recognition
that a social partnership is required has been very slow
in emerging and the question arises as to why this is so.
It is also the case that many governments still do not
perceive the risk that the HIV epidemic poses for all
aspects of social and economic development. Again, how
can this be explained and what needs to change?
It may be useful to distinguish between "endogenous
change" and "exogenous change". In the
case of the former, one is interested in those processes
of change which are internal to a society or community,
or other social group, or within a family. What brings
change about? More specifically, what are the forces
which lead to changes in behaviours and attitudes such
that those who are excluded (those living with HIV and
their families) are accepted by society? So that people
are enabled to understand the epidemic and are able to
perceive what needs to change in their own behaviour and
in social norms and conventions. The initial presumption
of experts was that these changes would be brought about
over time as societies experienced the illness and the
deaths of their friends and loved ones. That there would
indeed be Social Learning so that societies would adjust
to the issues raised by the epidemic, become more
socially inclusive, be reforming, and be generally
capable of those social changes necessary for responding
to the epidemic.
There are
examples within countries where this transformation has
taken place, e.g., in some areas of Uganda. But generally
the processes of social learning have been slow to
operate with the result that social, economic and
political changes have been slow in coming about. A
consequence of this has been that the HIV epidemic has
developed a severity in terms of the size of the
populations infected which far exceeds original
projections. Unless these processes of Social Learning
occur it is difficult to see what can prevent the
epidemic from continuing to effect the lives of everyone
from one generation to the next.
Unless there can be "exogenous changes" which
can be imported from outside a society. Examples of this
are condoms as also would be a vaccine where the
technologies come from outside a society, or forms of
social organisation which have been successful elsewhere.
At the present time there seems little hope that a
vaccine will be available and in any case when one does
there will have to be an infrastructure to deliver it.
Condoms have been more or less unpopular in most settings
and it seems obvious that social attitudes and behaviours
need to change first if they are to become widely used.
Organisations which have had some success elsewhere can
rarely be transplanted to other settings - although some
of the concepts may be transferable.
So what can be concluded from the evidence? It seems that
Social Learning is central to the processes of both
endogenous and exogenous change. New technologies are
unlikely to be successful unless these are accompanied by
other changes which are derived from social learning. It
is an aim of public policy to help this social learning
take place through building frameworks of laws and
ethics, and respect for human rights, and through
ensuring that everyone perceives the risks that the
epidemic poses to society. In a word society will have to
find ways of strengthening partnerships across gender,
economic, class and ethnic divides.
Part 2: ESTIMATINGDEMOGRAPHIC
AND DEVELOPMENTAL IMPACTS - A CASE STUDY OF NAMIBIA
Most of the lessons to be drawn from the foregoing are
more or less self-evident. Nevertheless, it is probably
worthwhile spelling out some of the more obvious
conclusions and relating these to socio-economic
conditions in Namibia. Data and information which are
very relevant to analysis of the socio-economic factors
affecting the HIV epidemic are contained in the Namibia
Human Development Report, UNDP 1996.
- Poverty
is obviously a factor in explaining who gets
infected with HIV although, as noted above, there
is no simple causal relationship, and the
non-poor are also engaged in risk behaviours
which expose them to infection. The evidence on
poverty in Namibia is unambiguous C some 40% of
households were classified as poor in 1994. There
are essentially two nations; the white population
(5% of the total), and an emerging black elite
(1%), who have average annual per capita incomes
of US$16,500, while blacks in the modern sector
(39%) have incomes of US$750 and the rest of the
population have an estimated annual income of
US$85.
- Namibian
society is also highly unequal. The World Bank
concluded that, "There are at least 2
Namibias. The white population...is mostly urban
and enjoys the incomes and amenities of a Western
European country. The black population, mostly
rural, lives in abject poverty". The result
is that 65% of national income is received by 10%
of the population, with the remaining 90%
receiving the remaining 35% of the national pie.
But it is not only inequality of income, it is
also inequality of the ownership of assets, with
most of the financial and business assets held by
a small minority, and with ownership of the most
valuable land and mining resources also
concentrated in their ownership. Namibia is
without doubt one of the most unequal countries
both in the distribution of income and in the
ownership of productive assets.
- Inequality
of income and assets have effects which transcend
issues of economic and political power. They have
consequences also for patterns of demand and for
employment, and have effects on the distribution
of labour both within sectors as well as
spatially. Thus an element in rural to urban
labour migration is the demand for largely
unskilled and often poorly educated labour to
serve the needs of the urban elite. They come
partly in search of jobs and to escape rural
poverty, and in part they are attracted by the
lifestyles of urban society. But once in the
cities they engage often in behaviours which
expose them to risk of HIV infection, and then on
their return to their rural communities they
further transmit the virus to their spouses. The
urban population has been increasing at something
like twice the national rate which in part
reflects the gap between rural and urban incomes
- rural households have on average about one
third of the income of their urban counterparts.
- Inequality
extends well beyond incomes and assets and
differences in life styles. They are embedded in
more or less all aspects of Namibian life. All of
the social indicators for Namibia point to a
situation of great inequality in access to
schooling, in access to health care, in the
provision of housing, electricity, water and
sanitation. Thus 95% of rural households have no
access to electricity and 35% have no ready
access to piped water. While 66% of the
population is literate, only 58% of those in the
rural areas can read compared to 83% in urban
areas. There are deep ethnic, regional and
rural/urban differences in most of the aspects of
life which determine the standard of living.
- These
differences have great implications for the HIV
epidemic both in terms of what they imply for
risk behaviours but also in terms of what can be
achieved through HIV-related programme
activities. It becomes immensely difficult to
reach largely illiterate rural populations
through IEC programmes - whether these are
targeted at adults or at children/youth. The
ethnic diversity of the population and the use of
multiple languages makes all programming that
much more difficult for it has to be appropriate
for the particular group. The lack of access to
water will pose great problems for those who care
for HIV infected persons at home, mainly women,
given that access to water is absolutely
essential given that many patients suffer from
diarrhea.
- Many
studies point to vast inequalities in Namibia in
nutritional status with the poor, and especially
poor children, particularly affected. This again
has importance in terms of the epidemic since it
is clear that nutritional status is a factor in
the ability of HIV positive persons to deal with
opportunistic infections.
- Many
more women than men are infected with HIV and
many more young women than young men. In part,
this reflects the inequalities that women
continue to endure in Namibia - in all aspects of
economic and social life. Their health status is
worse than for men; and they have much lower
labour force participation rates than men. As the
NHIES concluded, "About 40% of Namibian
private households are headed by females. The
private consumption level in female headed
households is about half the consumption level in
male headed households." While there has
undoubtedly been progress in girls access to
education and in improvements in the legal
position of women (at least on paper but less so
in implementation) there is still a long distance
to travel in Namibia. As the UNDP HDR for Namibia
concluded in 1996, "In many
communities...attitudes to women are at best
outdated and at worst abominable, as evidenced by
the high rate of rape and violent crimes against
women." In a world of HIV and of AIDS the
lives of women have to be changed or there can be
no progress in addressing the fundamental factors
which are driving the epidemic in Namibia.
- Agriculture
continues to be the base for most of the
country's population and there is a clear duality
in this sector with high productivity and incomes
for commercial farmers and low productivity and
basic subsistence for the mass of traditional
farmers. Since the traditional farming sector is
where most of the poor are concentrated, it
follows that efforts need to be intensified to
raise productivity and incomes. This is crucial
if rural to urban migration is to be slowed.
Similarly, there is a need to re-examine
industrial development strategies so as to
minimise the mobility of labour within Namibia.
It is well known that Tourism can be a factor in
HIV transmission, and while no one would suggest
that development not take place in this sector,
there is nevertheless a need to ensure that
structures and programmes are in place to
minimise the possibilities of HIV transmission.
In the aggregate all areas of development
strategy should be assessed so as to address the
ways in which planned developments have adverse
effects on the growth of HIV in the population.
Namibia is
a fractured society. How could it be otherwise given its
recent history of colonialism and war of independence? It
is divided on ethnic grounds, on the basis of income and
wealth, on social class, and on gender. But the HIV
epidemic requires that society perceive the risks to its
continuation and its prosperity posed by the epidemic. As
such, the whole of civil society - not just Government
and one or two large private employers - have to
understand that all are threatened in one way or the
other by the epidemic. The challenge for Namibia is how
under conditions of social and economic differentiation
to build a partnership of all Namibians. There are no
blueprints for how to do this but an attempt must be
made, nevertheless. The changes in social policy of
recent years with a better distribution and higher levels
of expenditure on health and education are a start. But
the depth of the social deprivation and inequalities -
especially those that are gender based - are what is
driving HIV transmission in Namibia. Unless there is a
more intensive attack on many aspects of the things that
make up the lives of the poor, including access to
employment and better social services, there will be
little that can be achieved in reining back the HIV
epidemic.
Epidemiological Situation in Southern Africa
As noted above sub-Saharan Africa has some 70% of the
global total of 30 million people living with HIV, with
Southern Africa the worst affected region on the
continent. Adult HIV infection rates of 20-25% are seen
in countries with the highest prevalence, with urban
rates in some cities double the average for the total
adult population. In 1997 it was estimated that 2.4
million South Africans were living with HIV - an increase
of more than a third compared with 1996. In Botswana the
proportion of the adult population living with HIV has
doubled over the past five years (to an estimated 25% in
1997). In Francistown the second largest city in Botswana
the rate of HIV for pregnant women is now almost 50%
(1997). In Zimbabwe the adult rate of HIV infection in
1996 was 20% - one in five of all adults in the
population. With 32% of pregnant women testing HIV
positive in Harare in 1995, and a staggering 59% in Beit
Bridge (1996). Throughout the region HIV prevalence
continues to increase with rates in cities increasingly
being mirrored by those in rural areas.
The majority of new infections are in young people -
those between the ages of 15 and 24 (sometimes younger).
Thus in Zambia in one recent study over 12% of the 15-16
year olds seen at an ANC were HIV positive. In South
Africa the % of pregnant 15-19 year olds infected with
HIV rose to 13% in 1996 from about half that level two
years earlier. In Botswana the HIV rate for the same age
group stood at 28% in 1997. Infection rates in girls and
young women are significantly higher than they are for
boys and young men of the same age - thus in Malawi it is
reported that HIV infection rates of young women are 5 to
6 times higher than for young men in the age range 15-20.
The explanation of these differential rates of infection
are complex, partly physiological and partly
socio-economic. Whatever the causes the differentials
both create gender biased socio-economic consequences,
and at the same time call for programme responses which
specifically address the problems of young men and young
women.
The epidemiological situation in Namibia reflects that
common to other countries in the Region. Data on HIV for
pregnant women attending ANCs suggest an average rate for
the country as a whole of 15.4% in 1996 - this is a
tripling of the level of HIV nationwide in the 4 years
since 1992. HIV prevalence for women ranges from just
over 3% to more than 24% in the different districts; is
higher in urban than in rural areas (17.6% and 10.9%
respectively), and reaches its peak in the age range
20-34. While AIDS deaths are widely under-reported it is
still the case that it is now the leading cause of death
for all age groups in Namibia. For AIDS to have become
the leading cause of death by 1996 it follows that the
present estimates of HIV prevalence must be serious
under-estimates of the actual situation in the country.
It is thus much more probable that HIV rates are closer
to those in neighboring countries such as Botswana and
Zimbabwe.
Chart I is a summary representation of seroprevalence for
pregnant women in Southern Africa C it is the best proxy
available for measuring adult HIV infection. The visual
picture is bleak: the realities of the lives of people
even bleaker. The epidemic is without a doubt the
greatest threat to sustained development facing the
Region.
Demographic Effects of HIV and AIDS
No specific studies have been undertaken in Namibia into
the demographic effects of HIV and AIDS and it is thus
necessary to present data which relates to other high
prevalence countries in sub-Saharan Africa. These have
obvious relevance for Namibia given that HIV prevalence
rates here are similar to other countries in the region
and that demographic structures are also sufficiently
similar as to make comparisons possible. The US Census
Bureau has recently published its estimates of the
demographic effects of HIV and AIDS on Africa and these
are the most up to date and consistent estimates and
projections currently available. In what follows the
Census Bureau's estimates and projections are presented
in the form of a commentary for the main aggregates under
discussion, together with Charts to illustrate their
projections which compare states with and without AIDS
for the Southern Africa region. The following key
outcomes are presented below:
-
crude death rates
- infant mortality rates
- child mortality rates
- population growth rates
- life expectancy
1. The most immediate effect of the HIV epidemic is to
increase the crude death rate for the populations
affected. These will be higher where HIV prevalence is
higher, which in sub-Saharan Africa is in the Eastern and
Southern regions where the epidemic is most mature.
Within these regions HIV is highest generally everywhere
in urban settings and so also will be observable and
predicted mortality. Chart 1 presents data on crude death
rates for Southern Africa for the year 2010. Since crude
death rates are generally lower in this region that
elsewhere in sub-Saharan Africa so the increases will be
relatively greater. By the year 2010 the crude death rate
is projected to be 6 times higher in Zimbabwe, 4 time
higher in Botswana and 3 time greater in Zambia than it
would have been in the absence of AIDS (Chart
2).
2. Infant mortality rates are already rising sharply in
countries with mature epidemics. Children borne to
mothers who are HIV positive have a 30-60% chance of
becoming positive themselves. In 1996 infant mortality
rates in Zambia and Zimbabwe are estimated as being
already 25% higher than they would have been in the
absence of AIDS. In Southern Africa projections for 2010
are that deaths due to AIDS will more than double infant
mortality rates in Botswana and Zimbabwe, and be more
than 40% higher in Malawi (where rates are currently
higher than elsewhere in the Region) and 60% higher in
Zambia (Chart 3).
3. It is estimated that two-thirds of AIDS-deaths will
occur in children aged 1-4 years. These rates will
increase since many children who are positive survive
past their first birthday. Child mortality rates are
already higher today than they would have been without
AIDS in some high prevalence countries. Thus child
mortality rates are estimated as being 75% higher in
Botswana in 1996. By the year 2010 child mortality rates
are expected to be twice as high in Botswana, 4 times
greater in Zimbabwe and about twice as high in Zambia and
Malawi (Chart 4).
4. Projecting the overall effects on population growth is
difficult in part because it depends on fertility
decisions which are themselves partly the outcome of the
effects of AIDS, and on decisions made in the knowledge
of the effects of AIDS. Almost all past projections have
supported the proposition that in spite of AIDS most
countries will continue to experience positive population
growth. Nevertheless the Census Bureau estimates suggest
that 2 countries in sub-Saharan Africa will experience
negative population growth by the year 2010 - in Botswana
the rate is estimated to be minus 0.4 %(compared to a
without AIDS rate of 1.9%), in Zimbabwe minus 0.5%
(compared to 1.8%), and in Zambia 1.2% (compared to
3.1%), and in Malawi 0.1% (compared to 2.2%), see Chart
5.
5. The most striking demographic effects are on life
expectancy (Chart 6). Without AIDS all
countries in the region would have been expected to have
increased life expectancy as has been the case in recent
decades more or less everywhere in sub-Saharan Africa.
The effects of AIDS will be to increase mortality for
children and young adults where mortality would otherwise
have been low (and falling). The result is that AIDS will
have the greatest impact on life expectancy, which other
things being equal is one of the most important ways in
which improvements in the standard of living are achieved
and measured. It is indeed one of the three important
elements in the UNDP HDI because of its value in
summarising the benefits to individuals (societies) of
sustainable human development.
The estimates suggest that life expectancy has already
been reduced from 64.1 years in Zimbabwe to 41.9. But the
situation in Zimbabwe is projected to deteriorate even
further; without AIDS life expectancy in 2010 would have
been an estimated 70 years but with AIDS it falls to less
than 35 years. A disastrous decline and the worst
projected for any country in sub-Saharan Africa. All of
the countries in the Southern Africa Region are projected
to suffer major declines in life expectancy caused by
AIDS by the year 2010 -- for Botswana from 66.3 to 33.4;
for Malawi from 56.8 to 29.5; for South Africa from 67.9
to 47.8, and for Zambia from 60.1 to 30.3 years.
Estimating the Impact of HIV and AIDS on Human
Development
It is now generally accepted that the HIV epidemic has
multiple and complex effects on sustainable human
development. These impacts have their origins in the
effects of HIV and AIDS on the growth in the labour force
and on the productivity of labour and capital. It also
has effects on demographic factors in ways which have
been identified above, with the probability that labour
losses due to HIV and AIDS will erode the human resource
base of the country. It is also the case that the HIV
epidemic will distort the uses of national income and
through changing its composition over time will reduce
the growth rate of potential economic growth.
This effect will come through two channels. Firstly, a
diversion of savings into less productive uses (primarily
into health and related expenditures by households and
governments) so that fewer resources are available for
investment which is the main instrument for achieving
economic growth. With less productive investment there
will be slower growth in GDP, and, very importantly less
growth in employment. For countries which already have
severe employment problems and with large projected
numbers of youths entering the labour force in the coming
years, such as Namibia, the loss of employment
opportunities is indeed a major problem.
The second main channel whereby economic growth may be
reduced is through what might be described as
"system failure". this could take many forms
and have many causes. The most likely effect on the
economic system's capacity to function will occur through
the losses of human resources which are projected on
account of HIV and AIDS. Both the economic and social
systems depend on the expectation that individuals and
institutions (both public and private) function more or
less normally. Thus the expectation is that the legal
system functions - that cases are prepared and heard in a
timely fashion. But there is evidence that this can no
longer be assumed to be the case for all sorts of reasons
to do with the effects of HIV and AIDS (witnesses are
sick and do not turn up, lawyers and court officials
similarly). The examples could be multiplied but the
point is fairly obvious that HIV and AIDS will have
effects which reduce the capacity of systems to function
and thus will reduce the overall efficiency of the
country. These are effects which will compound over time,
and are far from easy to address through policy and
programme interventions. This is not to suggest that
nothing can be done to reduce system losses in
efficiency, because there are things that can be done,
and indeed it should be part of the plans of both the
private and public sectors to develop appropriate
programme responses in advance of the problems becoming
too severe.
An interesting attempt to capture some of the effects of
the HIV epidemic has been attempted by researchers from
Columbia University. This is, as with most estimates,
only a partial measurement of what is a dynamic process
with many contributing elements. As we have seen above,
the epidemic will have catastrophic effects on life
expectancy in sub-Saharan Africa - including Namibia.
Life expectancy is one of the three elements in the UNDP
Human Development Index with an approximate weight in the
index of one-third (for an explanation of the index and
its construction for Namibia, see the Namibia Human
Development Report, UNDP, 1996). As was also noted
earlier, the life expectancy indicator can be seen as a
summarising variable which measures standard of living
achievements for the population as a whole. It follows
that charting the effects of changes in life expectancy
caused by HIV and AIDS is very important for aggregate
measures of human development such as the HDI.
The Box
summarises the results of the estimations undertaken by
the Columbia researchers of the effects of HIV and AIDS
on the HDI for a number of countries. As can be seen from
the Box the effects of HIV as measured by the HDI are
very substantial. As was to be expected those countries
with mature epidemics and high HIV prevalence rates are
most affected. In the case of Zambia there is a loss of
ten years of human development progress, for Tanzania a
loss of 8 years, and for Malawi and Zimbabwe losses of
3-5 years. It should be noted that these losses relate to
the years 1980-1992 when the HIV epidemic was exhibiting
nothing like the severity it has imposed on countries of
Southern Africa in recent years. Furthermore, the
predicted reductions in life expectancy over the next
decade or so (as projected above by the US Census Bureau)
are far greater than those which occurred during the
decade 1980-1992. It follows that the losses of human
development as measured by the Human Development Index
will be much greater in the coming years than those
estimated by the Columbia research team for the past
decade of the 1980s.
The scale of the setback to
human development from HIV/AIDS has been
confirmed by a recent UNDP study carried out by
researchers at Columbia University and the
Harvard Institute for International Development.
This study concludes that between 1980 and 1992 a
sample of 56 countries from all regions of the
world lost on average 1.3 years of human
development progress. And in some countries the
setback was particularly severe -- for Zambia,
more than ten years, Tanzania eight years, Rwanda
seven years and the Central African Republic more
than six years. Burundi, Kenya, Malawi, Uganda
and Zimbabwe lost between three and five years.
The method used compares the actual 1980 and 1992
human development index (HDI) with the estimated
1992 HDI that would have occurred in the absence
of AIDS. The impact of HIV/AIDS on the HDI
operates mainly through the dramatic reduction of
life expectancy. More than 85% of HIV/AIDS deaths
worldwide occur among people between 20 and 45
years old. The study found only a marginal impact
on the other components of the HDI. But because
HDI is only a partial measurement of human
development, the impact of HIV/AIDS goes far
beyond what this study shows.
Source: Bloom, Bennet, Mahal and Noor 1996.
|
The HDI for selected countries in Southern
Africa has been re-estimated to take account of the
effects of changes in Life Expectancy as calculated by
the Census Bureau. These data are given in Chart 7 which represents
the HDI on a With AIDS and Without AIDS basis for 1996
and 2010. These calculations need to be treated with
caution because of the underlying assumptions made about
the data over the projected period. As would be expected
given the weight of Life Expectancy in the HDI there are
quite strong changes in the level of the index for
individual countries in 1996 when all of the countries
show a decline in their HDI value. It is difficult to
interpret what these changes mean in any absolute sense
(losses of human development due to AIDS), and it may be
simpler to view the data for a single year in terms of
the changes in relative ranking of these countries - a
worsening of their HDI performance in all cases.
It is possible to draw somewhat stronger conclusions from
the projected movements of the HDI over the period
1996-2010, again bearing in mind the caveats noted above
about the assumptions underlying the projections. One way
to interpret the data is to look at individual countries
and compare the Without AIDS case in 1996 and 2010, such
as Botswana where over this period there would have been
an increase of the HDI. This can be compared with the
With AIDS case where over this period there is a decline
in the HDI. In other words the improvement in human
development that would have occurred in the absence of
AIDS in Botswana does not materialise. Instead Botswana
will witness an actual fall in its HDI over the projected
period such that human development in 2010 is reduced
below what it was in the Without and With AIDS cases in
1996. Confirming the expectation that potential human
development is lost because of the AIDS epidemic. This
experience is not confined to Botswana alone but is
general to other countries in the region with high levels
of HIV prevalance.
It is similarly possible to construct a forward looking
HDI for Namibia which takes account of HIV and AIDS. The
results of doing this are reported below. It needs to be
realised that the 2 Scenarios which are given are based
on estimated data and have unknown errors. They are
presented in order to get an idea of the effects on human
development as measured by the HDI and are NOT
projections. Two scenarios are developed:
- Scenario
1 is the better case and has used Life Expectancy
data for South Africa (US Census Bureau Institute
estimates) to derive the with and without AIDS
information, and has applied a negative factor of
0.5% each year to the Income per Capita data. The
Educational component of the Index is assumed to
be unaffected by the epidemic.
- Scenario
2 is the worse case and has used Life Expectancy
data for Botswana as a country with similar HIV
prevalence and many other characteristics which
are similar to Namibia. A factor of minus 1.0%
per annum has been applied to the Income per
Capita component of the Index on the grounds that
the effects of the epidemic will be more severe
in this Scenario than in 1. The Educational
Attainment Index has been assumed to be the same
as in Scenario 1.
Results
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX - NAMIBIA, 1996-2006
|
1996
|
2006
|
| |
|
Without
AIDS
|
With AIDS
|
| Scenario 1 |
0.734
|
0.783
|
0.733
|
| Scenario 2 |
0.734
|
0.787
|
0.711
|
Comments
The
behaviour of the HDI for Namibia for both scenarios is
given in Chart 8. Scenario 1 is the
less worse case of the two simulations for essentially
two reasons. In the first case life expectancy is
expected to fall by less in the With AIDS case and income
per capita to also decline by less than in Scenario 2.
These different assumptions with respect to life
expectancy are what are largely driving the changes in
the HDI in the two different Scenarios. In the case of
Scenario 1, what the data suggests is that human
development because of HIV and AIDS will more or less
show no improvement over the decade, whereas if HIV had
not been present in the population there would have been
significant improvement. In effect, HIV and AIDS causes a
loss equivalent to a 7% improvement in the HDI compared
with 1996.
Scenario 2 represents a significantly worse case. In part
this is due to the much more severe worsening in life
expectancy which is assumed in the With AIDS case
(without AIDS this would have improved between 1996 and
2006). There is also an assumed greater impact of HIV on
growth in GDP per capita compared with Scenario 1. Over
the decade in the Without AIDS case there would have been
significant improvement in the index of the order of 7%
compared with 1996. In the With AIDS case there is an
actual fall in the HDI in the order of 3% compared to
1996. In effect there is a net loss over the decade
compared to 1996 in the With AIDS case of 10% of the
level of the HDI in that year. Or to put it another way
the HIV epidemic will cause a loss equal to about 5 years
of the improvement in the HDI due to social and economic
development that would otherwise have taken place.
Both of these Scenarios paint a picture of losses of
human development which are severe for a country such as
Namibia where the HDI already places the country very low
down in the UNDP rankings (116 out of 174 in 1996). It
represents for the mass of the population who live in
abject poverty yet a further deterioration in their
living standards. Because the HDI is dealing in
aggregates it masks the scale of the worsening in human
development that will be the outcome of HIV and AIDS in
Namibia for most of the population. Most of the impact of
the decline in life expectancy and of the slower growth
in average per capita income caused by the epidemic will
fall unequally on those who are already the most
deprived, and least able to cope with the multiple
impacts of the epidemic.
Part 3 : ESTIMATING SECTORAL
IMPACTS OF THE EPIDEMIC IN NAMIBIA
1. Households
The previous sections have identified the probable
effects of the epidemic at the national and at the
personal level. There can be no doubt that for
individuals and their families there will be intense
personal suffering as families attempt to deal with the
personal, social and economic effects of illness and
death. The expectation has to be that there will be both
immediate effects on individuals and their families as
they try to cope with losses of earnings and additional
medical costs. But the effects at the personal level will
also be longer term since households will attempt to deal
with the immediate effects of illness through depletion
of savings (if there are any) and disposing of other
assets (such as land). This will mean that in the longer
team the sustainability of households either as social
units (families where children are supported and
socialised) and/or as productive units (as in subsistence
agriculture) will be threatened.
The evidence from other countries in sub-Saharan Africa
is mixed, both in terms of the impact on individual and
family poverty and on the sustainability of households.
What is clear, as in the Kagera Region of Tanzania, is
that households are only able to survive the effects of
HIV on family members through drawing down extensive
assistance from NGOs and their relatives. It is best to
use as a working assumption that families affected by the
epidemic will need psycho-social support from their
communities and from NGOs, and others, as well as
economic support if they are to cope. This assistance
will not usually be automatically forthcoming and
communities and CBOs/NGOs, as well as Government, will
have to support institutional and other development so as
to cushion the impacts on families. Unless this is done
there will be intense social and economic distress for
those often least able to cope (the poorest) together
with longer term problems of how to maintain families as
social, and economic institutions.
2.
Productive Sectors
a. Subsistence Agriculture
Households have been treated separately from other
productive sectors although it is obviously the case that
they account for a significant part of the national
output, both measured and none-measured. This is most
obviously true in the case of subsistence agriculture
from which some 50% of Namibians derive their support.
Most of the poorest in the country are concentrated in
this sector, where the capacity to withstand the effects
of the epidemic on production is least developed. What is
evident from other countries' experience is that
adjustment to losses of productive labour through the
illness and death of family members is possible but also
difficult. Thus there is evidence that surviving
children, who may have lost both parents to HIV-related
illnesses, often have problems in retaining family land
and other assets (such as housing and animals). There is
a clear need to strengthen the rights of survivors -
which will often include widows as well as children - if
families are to continue to produce food and marketable
outputs. These matters cannot and should not be left to
individuals to cope with, and there is a clear and
identifiable role here for the Ministry of Agriculture
and for social sector ministries, as well as NGOs, if the
sectoral effects of the epidemic on this very large
number of Namibians is to be minimised. Government, and
others, have to begin now to plan for the consequences so
as to develop the structures and the programmes for what
is going to become the largest single problem flowing
from the epidemic. While this sector may account for only
some 3% of GDP it is, nevertheless, the primary support
for half of the population.
b. Commercial Agriculture
About 4000 farmers employing some 36000 workers account
for some 9% of GDP. This sector is thus an important
contributor to national output and a major source of
employment. It follows that what will happen to HIV
infection in this sector is of great importance. But the
sector (unlike mining) is characterised by many
independent producers (farmers) which will make it
difficult to create a common interest in responding to
HIV and AIDS. The same factor of physical isolation as
well as productive independence makes it difficult for
the workers to respond (even if other conditions made
this possible - such as labour unionisation). But this
important sector, like all other sectors in Namibia, will
be significantly affected by illness and death of workers
- both skilled, supervisory, and unskilled.
The evidence from other countries in sub-Saharan Africa
is that the effects of the HIV epidemic are already being
felt on commercial farmers, e.g., in Kenya and Zimbabwe.
These effects cannot now be avoided for HIV infection is
already high in the adult population throughout Namibia.
The epidemic will impose significant costs for producers
in terms of lower labour productivity and higher costs
generally - some of these will be direct and some
indirect (as the epidemic effects the suppliers of other
services such as mechanical repair and transport) and as
the epidemic effects the general performance of the
economic system. While some of the costs are now
unavoidable there are things that the sector can do as a
sector through appropriate organisation. In part, the
objectives should be to minimise the effects of HIV and
AIDS through planning for the consequences of existing
infection in the work force, and also to undertake those
activities which can reduce future HIV infection. It has
to be assumed, for example, that many skilled and
supervisory workers will be infected and that these
workers will not be at all easy to replace, even if this
is possible in the case of unskilled workers.
Whatever the actual situation facing individual farmers,
there is a joint interest as a group in doing whatever
can be done to minimise the effects on the commercial
farming sector. An obvious first step would be to
communicate with commercial farmers in Zimbabwe in order
to observe and learn from their activities. There is also
an obligation on this sector to help their workers and
their families cope with the consequences of illness and
death. These are obligations which should not be just
shrugged-off by farmers, nor should Government permit
this to happen. More generally the farming community has
a social responsibility to take a leadership position in
the national response to the epidemic and for this to be
possible their organisations need to both formulate a
strategy for action and become active.
c. Mining
This sector accounts for about 12% of GDP and for some
3.5% of employment. As such it is not only a major
contributor to national output but it also accounts for
no less that 50% of total merchandise exports. It has,
therefore, a critical role in the economy - a role which
is currently irreplaceable both in terms of foreign
exchange earnings but also as a source of financial
revenue for the financing of Government. As with other
sectors it will have to deal with HIV infection amongst
its labour - at both managerial, skilled and unskilled
levels. Since it is a "modern" sector it will
incur all the usual direct costs associated with the
epidemic - absenteeism, health costs for employees and
sometimes for dependents, retraining costs and additional
recruitment costs, etc. But since labour costs account
for such a small proportion of total costs, it is
unlikely that these additional costs will have dramatic
effects on what are profitable activities. But effects
the epidemic will have - in addition to the direct costs
listed above - largely through the effects of managerial
and supervisory labour losses. These losses of human
capacity will not be easy to replace even if it is the
case that more unskilled labour losses can be absorbed
more easily through new recruitment.
Again there are possibilities of learning about what to
do to prevent new infections in the labour force and how
to minimise the costs for the enterprises in this
industry. There is a clear gap between firms such as
Namdeb which have instituted prevention activities and
that of other firms in the industry. This gap needs to be
closed as also are industry practices which recruit
single sex (male) labour. This pattern of recruitment has
been a major element in HIV transmission in Southern
Africa and needs to be ended as a matter of urgency. This
splitting of families through single sex recruitment has
not only led to male HIV infection but has been part of
the process whereby HIV is passed to wives and spouses in
the rural areas. It is thus part of the mechanism for
increasing rural HIV infection rates. Government should
act to prohibit such practices if the industry is unable
or unwilling to do so in its own interest. It would be
useful for the industry and the National AIDS programme
to look at what has been accomplished in Botswana (by
DEBSWANA) and to see what can be done for the labour
force in terms of recruitment practices and in
health/welfare provision for the families of workers.
d. Financial Sector
This sector performs essential services which are
integral to the smooth operation of the economy. It
accounts for only a small proportion of GDP and for only
small numbers of workers. But these indicators in no way
measure the central importance that banks, other
financial intermediaries such as insurance, brokers,
etc., play in economic life. It is instructive that some
of the larger enterprises operating in Namibia have
instituted HIV prevention programmes and again it is
essential that all of the major institutions establish
similar activities for their staff.
It is also important that Government concern itself with
some of the business activities of these firms. Elsewhere
in Africa (and in other parts of the world) these
financial enterprises have introduced policies which,
while they serve the interests of their shareholders, are
definitely NOT in the interest of clients - nor of
society as a whole. There is a clear conflict here
between private business interests and those of society.
For reasons, which are perfectly plausible for the
companies, they have introduced restrictions of life
insurance cover (often denying benefits to those who die
from AIDS), restrictions on health cover, and
restrictions on access to mortgage finance for housing.
The industry should not be allowed such freedom in
respect of activities which are so central to the lives
of many Namibians. They make it possible for the industry
to impose conditions in respect of financial contracts
which are inimical to an effective national response to
the epidemic. As such, it is essential that Government
look at existing practices by FI in conjunction with
industry representatives; look at the changing patterns
of industry regulation in other countries who have had to
face similar practices, and then establish new regulatory
structures and controls. This should be done preferably
through agreement, but if this proves impossible, then
through the use of the law.
e. Fishing
The fishing industry is a growing sector of the economy.
At independence, this sector produced 1.5% of GDP; by
1996 it had increased its share to 4%. The sector
provides a large amount of employment, and is expected to
surpass the mining sector in the number of jobs provided
by the year 2000.
The boom in the fishing industry has been one of the
major factors in the migration of job seekers to Walvis
Bay and Luderitz, the two principal sites of the fishing
industry. The HIV epidemic can affect this development in
a number of ways. Firstly, the industry acts as a focal
point for the transmission of HIV by drawing job seekers
and workers from various parts of the country. When
infected with HIV workers spread infection to their home
areas during their frequent visits. Secondly, as has been
the case in the mining sector throughout Southern Africa,
schemes for housing workers contribute to conditions in
which infection can spread rapidly. Many workers live in
either large dormitory compounds or in severely-cramped
single quarters, where a room built for one person now
accommodates twenty or more. Coupled with their isolation
from families and communities, conditions in these areas
increase the possibilities for the spread of HIV and
other STDs among workers. Finally, the fishing industry
requires large numbers of trained workers both on fishing
boats and in processing. As HIV/AIDS leads to losses of
human resources, the industry will be forced to spend
more on training, pensions and medical aid and other
costs.
f. Government
The Government accounts for about 30% of GDP and for
about the same proportion of formal sector employment in
Namibia. As such, it is by far the largest sector in the
economy, and it is also a major user of highly trained
and professional/managerial workers. Government in all
economies provides services which are essential to the
smooth running of the rest of the society and economy. It
is inconceivable that Namibia could achieve its
development objectives without an effective and efficient
public sector. Whether one is looking at public
administration pure and simple, or public services (such
as legal and judicial) or economic services (such as
communications and water). These are all essential
services and the extent that they are there and provided
efficiently has implications for the functioning of the
whole system.
But Government is also the largest source of employment
in Namibia with obligations to its employees and to their
families. Not only does Government have an obligation to
ensure that it provides the services needed by other
sectors, it also has an obligation to secure the health
of its employees and their families. As was noted
elsewhere in this Paper, HIV is no respector of class or
position and, if anything, there are higher rates of
infection in higher occupational groups - almost
certainly including employees in the public sector. In
other countries in the region there are already major
problems in maintaining human resource capacity in the
public sector, with high levels of absenteeism and labour
turnover at all levels of the public services and in
public sector industries. The effects are evident in the
costs that fall on the public sector and on the
deterioration in public services associated with
morbidity and mortality.
These are not easy matters to rectify but as with
everything else it is possible to minimise the
consequences of the impacts on public services through
appropriate planning for what is going to happen as a
result of existing HIV infection amongst employees. This
means establishing interdepartmental committees assisted
by expertise from outside to monitor what is happening
(on sickness and absenteeism) and to begin to plan for
some of the effects on public services - both at central
and local levels. It is also necessary to establish for
the public service appropriate conditions for those
infected with HIV to ensure that there is no
discrimination at the place of work, and that appropriate
policies are introduced to maintain people in employment
for as long as possible through access to health care and
social support. Workers can, with appropriate support
systems and access to health care, remain productive for
many years, and it is efficient that they be enabled to
do so. It is also morally right that they be supported so
as to be able to continue to work for as long as possible
for personal reasons - including supporting their
families. At the present time there are very few
Ministries which have introduced HIV in the Workplace
programmes and this is something that they should be
supported to do, drawing on the considerable experience
that now exists in the region about how to introduce and
manage such programmes.
This is by no means a complete analysis of the conditions
facing the different sectors in Namibia but it provides a
starting point for planning for the changes required
because of the epidemic. Changes in policies and in
programmes there will have to be. The responsibility lies
with Government, but little will be accomplished unless
there is a partnership between the various concerned
parties. There is much expertise in Africa now which can
be exploited, and there is no need to begin these
activities as if there was no existing stock of knowledge
and capacity in existence.
CONCLUSIONS
It is now
generally recognised that the HIV epidemic is not only a
threat to the nation's health, which it is, but also has
fundamental consequences for sustainable development. The
transmission of HIV is not random in the population, who
gets infected with the virus and what is the spatial
distribution of infection is determined by factors which
reflect structural social, cultural and economic forces
in a country. Namibia is no exception to the pattern
which is being repeated throughout sub-Saharan Africa.
Elsewhere in Africa, particularly in the East, Central
and Southern regions, the epidemic has cut a swathe
through the population, causing intense personal
suffering for those infected and affected. But the
effects of the epidemic extend beyond the personal,
terrible as these are, and communities and nations also
have to live and cope with the damaging consequences of
the losses of their most able and productive members.
None of this is inevitable, although countries including
Namibia have no choice but to try and ameliorate the
consequences for the society and economy of past HIV
infection. Those infected will have to be cared for
through public and private provision for them and their
families. There will inevitably be social costs,
including an intensification of the already extensive
poverty in Namibia, just as there will be economic costs
as productive sectors try to grapple with the losses of
productive labour. But these consequences, while
inevitable, can be managed and can be minimised through
policy and programme responses.
There are two challenges facing the nation -- not just
Government.
The first is to address through policies and programmes
the fundamental factors -- some health related and others
social (such as gender inequality) and others economic
(such as poverty and income and asset inequality) --
which have created ideal conditions within which HIV can
be transmitted. Government has already embarked on
actions which begin to address many of these issues but
there remains much that needs to be done.
The second is to seek to create a national awareness of
the risk that HIV and AIDS poses for the nation. This
means seeing the epidemic as an ongoing threat to
development and as such a factor which will constrain all
of the futures open to Namibia. It requires no less than
a social mobilisation; everyone from the poorest Namibian
to the richest has a stake in overcoming this threat to
human development.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
Desmond Cohen is an
economist with university teaching experience in Africa,
Canada, the UK and the USA. Formerly he was a Governor
and Associate Fellow at the Institute of Development
Studies, University of Sussex in the United Kingdom and
until 1990, he was Dean of the School of Social Sciences.
He has both research and applied macro-economic policy
experience in a number of African and Asian countries.
Previously he was an adviser to the British Treasury on
international financial policy. In 1997-98 he was
Director of the HIV and Development Programme (UNDP), and
currently he is Senior Adviser on HIV and Development.
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