
2.11 · Sector Forests
Public Services
The short sector overview highlights that Public Services does not merely experience risk passively. …
Sector overview
The short sector overview highlights that Public Services does not merely experience risk passively. It is also the primary mechanism through which the state responds to social, economic, environmental and institutional disruption. The IRMSA Top 10 Risks below therefore illustrate how national risk conditions translate into direct pressure on governance, continuity, infrastructure, trust, service delivery and public sector legitimacy.
p97— see this page in the report
Verdict
Taken together, these risks show that the Public Services sector sits at the centre of Southern Africa’s resilience challenge, as failures in the sector amplify instability across the rest of society and the economy. This creates a natural bridge to the next section, where the sector’s SWOT and PESTLE inputs are recast into a market style narrative that explains how structural strengths and weaknesses interact with the external environment.
Sector at a glance
- Role
- Delivers core services and implements policy.
- Spend
- Large share of budget goes to wages.
- Jobs
- Major employer across all three spheres.
- Trend
- Gradual modernisation, but performance uneven.
- Pressure
- Service delivery, capacity and corruption remain key risks.
Priorities & outlook
Key priorities
- Strengthening governance and accountability, rebuilding institutional capacity and professionalism, modernising systems and infrastructure, and improving service delivery reliability and public trust are critical to enhancing sector resilience.
Economic outlook
The public services sector faces a constrained and uneven outlook, shaped by fiscal pressures, rising service delivery demands and infrastructure backlogs, with gradual reform and digitalisation offering selective efficiency gains.
IRMSA Top 10 impact
How the ten national risks land in this sector — AVE RANK 1 is the highest impact. Browse with the arrow keys; open a risk for its national profile.
Rank 1 · Governance and leadership failure, state incapacity and institutional breakdown
Service breakdown and trust erosion
Persistent governance weaknesses, leadership instability and weak consequence management drive corruption and project delays, undermine planning and budgeting, and lead to ongoing service failures, protests and wasted public funds.
View as data table
| Rank | Risk | Impact label | Impact narrative |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Governance and leadership failure, state incapacity and institutional breakdown | Service breakdown and trust erosion | Persistent governance weaknesses, leadership instability and weak consequence management drive corruption and project delays, undermine planning and budgeting, and lead to ongoing service failures, protests and wasted public funds. |
| 2 | Systemic corruption, fraud, unethical conduct and organised crime eroding the rule of law, safety and security | Resource leakage and safety concerns | Corruption, procurement abuse, infrastructure theft and extortion divert resources, damage assets, delay projects and weaken financial controls, causing losses, service failures, higher safety risks and deep public mistrust. |
| 3 | Economic crisis, macroeconomic weakness and a non-competitive economy | Fiscal strain and reduced service capacity | Weak growth, high costs and constrained public finances reduce investment, close businesses and cut jobs, shrinking municipal revenues and limiting the ability to maintain infrastructure, expand services and support inclusive development. |
| 4 | Climate change and climate resilience failure | Disaster damage and escalating repair burden | More frequent storms, floods, heatwaves and water stress damage core infrastructure, disrupt services, increase repair backlogs and costs and strain disaster‑management capacity for households and local economies. |
| 5 | Critical infrastructure and capacitated infrastructure failure | Reliability loss and forced self‑provision | Ageing, poorly maintained and vandalised assets cause frequent outages and disruptions, drive protests, push communities and businesses to self‑provide services and raise operating costs while undermining confidence in public provision. |
| 6 | Electricity, energy and national grid failure | Operational disruption and uneven access | Power interruptions and asset failures disrupt municipal operations and critical facilities, increase backup and repair costs, encourage business relocation and deepen inequities in access to reliable services. |
| 7 | Cyber risk and digital disruption | Digital service interruption and data exposure | Growing dependence on digital systems exposes public entities to breaches, outages and online fraud that can halt billing and service platforms, cause privacy violations and financial loss and weaken confidence in digital government. |
| 8 | Unemployment, income disparity, inequality and lack of social cohesion | Rising social pressure on strained systems | High unemployment, rising living costs and inequality fuel crime, protests and demand for social support, increasing pressure on public services, budgets, staff and community relations. |
| 9 | Political instability and constrained cohesive politics | Decision paralysis and talent loss | Coalition volatility, contestation and protests delay decisions, reforms and infrastructure programmes, undermine policy consistency and investor confidence and discourage skilled staff from staying or fully contributing. |
| 10 | Water scarcity and water crises | Service interruptions and health threats | Ageing and constrained water systems cause outages, leaks and sewer spills that disrupt users, raise environmental and health risks and fuel community frustration, protests and reputational damage for municipalities. |
Risks, controls & opportunities
The chapter's ten sector-specific risks with their typical control and the opportunity each unlocks.
Ranked risks
| Rank | Risk |
|---|---|
| 1 | Service failures and backlogs trigger unrest. |
| 2 | Corruption and fraud erode trust and resources. |
| 3 | Political instability undermines governance and planning. |
| 4 | Capacity constraints limit policy implementation effectiveness. |
| 5 | Weak risk management leaves key risks unmanaged. |
| 6 | Climate risks disrupt services and strain capacity. |
| 7 | Complex regulations create duplication and implementation delays. |
| 8 | Cyber risks threaten services and citizen data. |
| 9 | Poor data limits decision making and performance. |
| 10 | Labour relations risks disrupt public service delivery. |
Detail
Select a risk in the table to see its typical control and the opportunity it unlocks.
View full table (controls & opportunities)
| Rank | Risk | Control | Opportunity |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Service failures and backlogs trigger unrest. | Plans, grants, BCPs, risk analysis implemented. | Resilient infrastructure and partnerships improve delivery. |
| 2 | Corruption and fraud erode trust and resources. | Controls, audits, investigations, whistleblowing mechanisms implemented. | Analytics and digital procurement improve transparency. |
| 3 | Political instability undermines governance and planning. | Governance frameworks, oversight, coordination mechanisms implemented. | Professionalisation and merit appointments improve stability. |
| 4 | Capacity constraints limit policy implementation effectiveness. | Training, partnerships, ICT modernisation programmes implemented. | Automation and shared services improve capacity. |
| 5 | Weak risk management leaves key risks unmanaged. | Frameworks, policies, committees, ERM processes implemented. | Integrated risk management improves decision making. |
| 6 | Climate risks disrupt services and strain capacity. | Disaster plans, legislation, early warning systems implemented. | Climate resilience integration improves recovery and preparedness. |
| 7 | Complex regulations create duplication and implementation delays. | Coordination mechanisms, guidance, aligned planning frameworks implemented. | Simplification and cross programmes improve efficiency. |
| 8 | Cyber risks threaten services and citizen data. | ICT policies, controls, backups, response plans implemented. | Secure digital platforms improve resilience and services. |
| 9 | Poor data limits decision making and performance. | Monitoring systems, policies, limited analytics tools implemented. | Data platforms and analytics improve insights. |
| 10 | Labour relations risks disrupt public service delivery. | Bargaining structures, policies, wellbeing programmes implemented. | Modern HR and engagement improve service quality. |
Strategic context
Internal context — SWOT
Strengths
- Constitutional, legal and policy mandate for a capable, developmental state
- Extensive service‑delivery footprint and social‑protection systems
- Growing focus on continuity, resilience and ERM
- Oversight ecosystem and external assurance mechanisms
- Professionalisation and capability‑building initiatives
Weaknesses
- Uneven institutional capacity and readiness across spheres
- Governance weaknesses, corruption and politicisation
- Ageing, under‑maintained and vulnerable infrastructure
- Fragmented and inconsistently embedded risk management
- Limited cyber‑resilience across public‑sector information systems
Opportunities
- Professionalisation, ethics and culture reforms
- Digital government, data integration and analytics
- Integrated disaster‑risk reduction and climate‑resilient planning
- Public‑private and community partnerships for resilience
- Critical‑infrastructure and threat‑risk assessments
Threats
- Recurrent service‑delivery failures and social unrest
- High crime, vandalism and infrastructure sabotage
- Fiscal constraints and rising demand for services
- Climate change, disasters and environmental degradation
- Escalating cyber‑threats to public‑sector systems
External context — PESTLE
Political
- Constitutional democracy, rule of law and institutional checks
- Public‑sector reform, professionalisation and anti‑corruption
- Multi‑sphere governance and intergovernmental coordination
- Security policy and critical‑infrastructure protection
Economic
- Macroeconomic performance, unemployment and fiscal sustainability
- Efficiency of public spending and procurement
- Public‑private partnership (PPP) frameworks and investor confidence
- Local‑government revenue and financial management
Social
- Demographics, urbanisation and service‑demand pressures
- Inequality, poverty and social‑cohesion dynamics
- Public trust, legitimacy and expectations of the state
- Human‑capital, skills and morale in the public service
Technological
- E‑government and digital‑service expansion
- Legacy IT systems, fragmentation and technical debt
- Cyber‑security capabilities and governance
- Use of analytics, AI and automation in public administration
Legal
- PFMA/MFMA and public‑finance governance frameworks
- Enterprise‑risk‑management and continuity requirements
- Critical‑infrastructure, cyber‑security and privacy law
- Administrative justice and litigation risk
Environmental
- Climate‑change hazard profile and disaster‑risk burden
- Environmental degradation, pollution and resource stress
- Green‑public‑procurement and low‑carbon transition
- Location and resilience of public infrastructure
Public Services
UmphakathiVuka next steps
The previous sections demonstrate that Public Services must be strengthened not only as an administrative system, but also as a social contract mechanism through which the state rebuilds trust, continuity and resilience. The UmphakathiVuka actions below therefore frame public-sector renewal as a shared undertaking rooted in ethics, accountability, inclusion and practical service delivery improvement.
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Public Services UmphakathiVuka compact and shared governance
Build a shared compact for a capable, ethical and people‑centred state by aligning all spheres of government, public entities, oversight bodies, labour, communities and social partners on the most material systemic risks, clear roles and shared resilience outcomes.
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Professional, ethical leadership and resilient basics
Restore trust through professional, ethical leadership and administration, using professionalisation frameworks, ethics programmes, lifestyle audits and real consequence management, while stabilising core basic services and infrastructure such as water, sanitation, roads, energy‑linked assets and digital systems through climate‑resilient design, maintenance and community‑informed planning.
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Embedded risk, continuity and climate‑resilient planning
Make risk management, continuity planning, disaster‑risk reduction and long‑term foresight central to decision‑making by integrating risk registers, budgets, performance plans, climate‑risk assessments and scenario planning so that institutions move from compliance to genuine resilience management. The Municipal Risk and Resilience Guideline, sponsored by SASRIA, authored by IRMSA and owned by SALGA, constitutes a formal and practical exemplar of such an initiative.
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Digital government, fiscal resilience and public servants’ wellbeing
Use digital government to improve service access, responsiveness and data protection through integrated platforms, cybersecurity baselines, skills development and tested incident response, while applying a resilience and equity lens to budgeting, staffing, maintenance, procurement and social protection, and treating public servants as critical resilience assets through capability‑building, better tools and psychosocial support.
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Community partnerships, protection of critical assets and public transparency
Co‑govern resilience with communities via ward structures, civil‑society forums and participatory planning, protect key public assets and frontline workers through coordinated threat and risk management, and make performance visible with simple public scorecards on service reliability, maintenance, governance, cyber and disaster readiness to strengthen legitimacy, oversight and shared learning across sectors.
Sector vs national ranking
Each risk's national Top-10 wheel rank against its AVE RANK in this chapter's impact grid, sorted by the biggest shift. Rank 1 (left) is most severe. Select a row to pin it.
View as data table
| Theme | Risk as printed in the grid | National rank | Sector AVE RANK | Shift |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crime | Systemic corruption, fraud, unethical conduct and organised crime eroding the rule of law, safety and security | 7 | 2 | ▲ 5 more acute in sector |
| Energy | Electricity, energy and national grid failure | 10 | 6 | ▲ 4 more acute in sector |
| Climate | Climate change and climate resilience failure | 6 | 4 | ▲ 2 more acute in sector |
| Cyber | Cyber risk and digital disruption | 8 | 7 | ▲ 1 more acute in sector |
| Governance | Governance and leadership failure, state incapacity and institutional breakdown | 1 | 1 | same rank as national |
| Economic | Economic crisis, macroeconomic weakness and a non-competitive economy | 2 | 3 | ▼ 1 less acute in sector |
| Infrastructure | Critical infrastructure and capacitated infrastructure failure | 4 | 5 | ▼ 1 less acute in sector |
| Water | Water scarcity and water crises | 9 | 10 | ▼ 1 less acute in sector |
| Inequality | Unemployment, income disparity, inequality and lack of social cohesion | 5 | 8 | ▼ 3 less acute in sector |
| Political | Political instability and constrained cohesive politics | 3 | 9 | ▼ 6 less acute in sector |
Positions from this chapter's Top 10 impact grid (p97) and the national Top 10 wheel.
