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Original Articles

Perceptions of service delivery and happiness

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Pages 169-184 | Received 01 Oct 1996, Accepted 01 Feb 1997, Published online: 27 Feb 2008
 

Abstract

An important task for students of development is to monitor progress in bringing basic services to all South Africans, one of the major objectives of the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP). This article reports on a subjective indicator study which began in February 1995, nine months after the April 1994 elections. The study, commissioned by Information Update, a Human Sciences Research Council research publication, inquired into personal happiness and assessments of local public services including access to water, education, electricity, health care, roads and transport. Over 5 700 South Africans were polled during 1995 in three nationally representative sample surveys. Secondary data analysis showed that perceived improvements to local services were closely associated with increases in happiness among all sectors of the population, including rural dwellers and the poor. The article discusses the policy implications of this finding for future voting behaviour and efficient local government.

Notes

Quality of Life and RDP Monitoring Unit, Centre for Social and Development Studies, University of Natal.

Revised version of a paper first presented at the Development Society of Southern Africa Conference: ‘Conflicting challenges in development, held at the University of Stellenbosch, 25‐27 September 1996.

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