News
Author: Corporate Communication & Marketing / Korporatiewe Kommunikasie & Bemarking [Alec Basson]
Published: 27/05/2021
Researchers from ReSEP (Research on Socioeconomic Policy) in the Department of Economics at Stellenbosch University (SU) contributed significantly to Wave 4 of the
11 Working Papers that capture the findings of data collected for this wave of NIDS-CRAM which is a broadly nationally representative survey of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on South Africans.
As part of NIDS-CRAM Wave 4, data on vaccines, employment, schooling, hunger, and early childhood development was collected between 2 February and 10 March this year and 5629 successful interviews were conducted. In a
Synthesis Report, the seven main findings are grouped in the following five categories: vaccines, education, employment, early childhood development and hunger. The findings are as follows: