2010 South African Reconciliation Barometer released: Economic insecurity threatens 2010 World Cup gains, survey finds
South Africans are increasingly worried about their economic security putting at risk gains that have been made and leading to significant stress, a major reconciliation survey has found.
"Human security concerns have been amongst the country's biggest challenges," said the Institute of Justice's Kate Lefko-Everett and "one could argue one of the areas in which progress has been the slowest".
On the positive side there has been a moderate overall improvement in perceptions of physical security and safety which "goes some way to offset the negative social consequences of physical insecurity", said Lefko-Everett.
An important trend reversal in this year's Institute of Justice and Reconciliation's 10th South African Reconciliation Barometer (SARB) is South Africans' confidence in public institutions (see here - PDF). There was a marked decline in trust in public institutions between 2006 and 2009 across all spheres of government. However, in 2010 this trend has reversed with a reported increase in confidence in most institutions.
Lefko-Everett said the concern felt about the economy and unemployment had likely been influenced by the global recession. In 2010 the third-quarter unemployment rate stood at 25.3 percent.