Understanding Roscas’ Resilience in Providing Informal Social Protection Amidst Covid–19 Pandemic in Ongata Rongai Ward Kajiado Kenya.
Abstract
In Africa, social protection has been lauded and now stands out to be a very strategic tool and
modality in responding to poverty and the many eventualities that cause it, like shocks and
exposure to different risks and vulnerabilities. State-offered social protection in Africa does not
cover the majority of citizens, particularly those in the informal sector, forcing many vulnerable
groups into informal social protection mechanisms. However, informal social protection
institutions respond differently when subjected to intense shocks or crises like the COVID-19.
Existing literature paints two pictures: one side in support that informal social protection
mechanism has capacities and abilities to withstand the impacts of intense shocks while the other
states that capacities and abilities of informal social protection institutions are threatened when
subjected to intense shock impacts. This study seeks to gain a better understanding of ROSCAs’
resilience in providing informal social protection amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, as a
contribution towards clarifying the existing contention in topical literature. Moreover, COVID –
19 pandemic in the current study is a proxy, a projection of ROSCAs operations in future similar
uncertainties. The study used a qualitative design with focus group discussions and key
informant interviews as primary data collection tools. Focus group discussions were conducted
on ROSCA members who were active in groups, while key informant interviews were conducted
on ROSCA leaders and social services officials. Interview guides for focus group discussions
and the key informants were pre-tested by sharing them with social services officials and some
ROSCA members in urge of understanding the questions that needed clarification from the
researcher before the research. Using purposive sampling, the study sampled 57 respondents,
with 4 focus group discussions and 9 key informants. Data gathered from the field was cleaned
before the analysis, through following up on incomplete cases done via phone calls. The data
was then analyzed using thematic analysis conducted manually and the findings presented in
terms of emerging themes. The study found a range of vulnerabilities that affected ROSCA
members during COVID – 19, challenges that ROSCA groups encountered in urge to cushion
their members amid the pandemic, and strategies that ROSCAs were coming up with intended to
improve their cushioning capabilities and abilities in future uncertainties. The results led to the
conclusion by this study that ROSCAs were not resilient in cushioning their members during the
Corona period although they have plans on how to improve their abilities to cushion in future
uncertainties, thus be resilient in their operation when subjected to such intense shocks. The
study recommends that ROSCAs need long-term developments unlike short term cushioning
plans which are not sufficient during covariate shock, proper financial management skills during
crises to enable them cater for emergencies, membership diversification to distribute shock
effectives equally among members and involvement of social services officials in ROSCA
meetings to help them understand critical dimensions. Further research should be done in this
area to assess what strategies have worked for ROSCA as a result of adopting them in relation to
COVID – 19 pandemic.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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