Why social investment remains crucial during economic upheaval
Written by: By Leanne Emery-Hunter, CEO of Tshikululu Social Investments Save to Instapaper
The Middle East conflict continues to destabilise an already volatile global economy, driving energy price shocks, inflationary pressure, and heightened uncertainty for developing economies, particularly those exposed to energy and currency volatility.
In South Africa, economic shockwaves continue to drive up fuel prices, strain energy systems, and push the cost of living beyond reach. Against a backdrop of persistent inequality and unemployment, the impact is particularly acute.
Vulnerable communities are being hit the hardest, as food insecurity deepens, access to basic services becomes more constrained, and households are forced into difficult trade-offs between essential needs.
The Growing Importance Of Corporate Social Investment
In this context, the role of corporate social investment (CSI) becomes even more significant. Corporates are navigating a complex balancing act—supporting vulnerable communities while managing increasing internal cost pressures.
This presents a clear challenge, but it is also a call to rethink how social investment is structured to build resilience in the face of ongoing global volatility.
A practical starting point is addressing fragmentation. In many organisations, different teams manage different programmes in silos, which can lead to duplicated effort and diluted impact.
Combining these levers and aligning them to a unified goal creates a social impact ecosystem where programmes reinforce one another. This approach is about systems, not single programmes.
Investment becomes effective, sustainable, and impactful where it is needed most.
Building Resilience Through Collaboration
We cannot build resilient, future-proof systems alone.
While corporate social investment plays an important role, it is significantly smaller in scale than government expenditure on social development. Maintaining meaningful impact in a high-cost environment therefore requires stronger collaboration across sectors.
Partnerships between corporates, philanthropies, non-profits, government, and communities enable resources to be better aligned, ensuring that interventions are both scalable and sustainable.
Cross-Sector Collaboration In Practice
In practice, this kind of collaboration is already taking shape.
In the Northern Cape, we are working with multiple companies operating in the renewable energy and mining sectors that are actively aligning their social investment resources across a shared geographic area.
They are working together to compound impact in sectors such as education and health. Rather than each company pursuing separate programmes in the same communities, they are pooling focus and coordinating outputs.
This model demonstrates how cross-sector collaboration can move from principle to practice, and from isolated interventions to systemic change.
Social Investment As A Core Sustainability Strategy
While global economic volatility may sit beyond the control of South African corporates, the way organisations respond locally is firmly within their influence.
The question is no longer whether to invest in social impact, but how to do so more effectively.
Those that move toward more integrated, collaborative approaches will be better positioned to build resilience—not only within the communities they serve, but within their own organisations.
In an increasingly uncertain world, social investment is no longer a peripheral activity; it is a core part of long-term sustainability.
Submitted on behalf of
Get new press articles by email
Fyfe PR is a publicity company which draws on many years of experience. Fyfe PR is small enough to offer an extremely personal approach to servicing clients and providing quality campaigns and events. With strong relationships with the media and suppliers on a national basis, Fyfe PR is able to offer clients a great network within which to operate, ensuring the best results for... Read More
Latest from
- Helplink AI - Why AI May Be South Africa’s Biggest Job Creation Opportunity
- Weelee Expansion Signals Strong Confidence in South Africa’s Booming Pre-Owned car Market – Silver Lakes Megastore to Create Local Jobs and Give Back to Communities
- World Hunger Month update - KFC Add Hope’s open-source blueprint is delivering real-world impact
- Investing in Community media to uphold democracy Cebisa Zondo, SI Analyst - Fund Management & Specialist Services, Tshikululu Social Investments
- Global Tariff Shake-Up Makes Pre-Owned Cars The Smartest Choice For South African Buyers
- Safe Passage Precinct From Bree Street to the Nation - A New Urban Vision Takes Shape Executive Mayor Opens South Africa’s First Inner-City Street Experiment
- Wings Over Winelands Airshow Brings Aviation Action to Vergelegen Wine Estate
- Cape Town to host strategic Oceans Economy Conference as global maritime tensions recast the importance of sea power and trade security
- Join Leaders Shaping SA's inclusive economy - CADE Summit 2026
- Kagiso Trust launches toolkit to help matric learners turn uncertainty into action
- One year after USAID and PEPFAR funding cuts, South Africa is rebuilding its healthcare system from within
- Adreach Impact Brand Solutions Expands Partnership with Parktown Boys’ High School
- Kagiso Trust sets its sights on igniting human capacity across Africa
- Navigating South Africa’s Fuel Price Crisis - Pre-Owned Hybrids Offer Practical Protection as Global fuel Shock Hits Home
- Navigating South Africa’s Fuel Price Crisis - Pre-Owned Hybrids Offer Practical Protection as Global fuel Shock Hits Home
The Pulse Latest Articles
- South African Women Are Missing This Essential Nutrient (May 20, 2026)
- Opinion Piece: Rethinking Performance: Why Behaviour Remains The Missing Link In Evaluation (May 20, 2026)
- 125 Years Of Hansgrohe And The Designers Who Made Axor A Luxury Language (May 19, 2026)
- World Whisky Day: Whisky Lovers Challenged To Stop Saving Their Best Bottles (May 15, 2026)
- Hidden Inefficiencies Are Draining South African Businesses (May 15, 2026)
