3 JUNE 2026

They Say They’re Developing Us
Kanti Niks, They’re Developing Themselves
Awe Digital Revolutionary,
There is something we need to talk about.
Something that has been happening in our communities for a very long time that nobody has been saying out loud.
Until now.
You know the feeling.
A new company or organisation comes to the community.
They have a programme.
They have brochures.
They have a video camera.
They take photos of you.
They ask you about your challenges.
They write down your answers.
Then they go away and write a report about your challenges, using your words, stories, faces, and they submit it for funding.
Then they come back.
And they run a workshop.
And then they leave again.
And six months later, you are in the same position you were in before they came.
And they have a bigger budget, better offices, and a new project coordinator.
Who did the development actually happen to?
We have a name for this structural arrangement.
It is called The Youth Development Balkanization, the "ka Mina, ka Wena" arrangement at the expense of the future payers of our national government debt, currently sitting at approximately R6.09 trillion.
The Youth Development Balkanization means the fragmentation and capture of youth development budgets, programmes, and agenda by people and organisations with limited lived experience, understanding, and accountability to our communities.
It is another form of the Berlin Conference applied to our youth.
In 1884, European colonial powers divided our African continent among themselves without consulting or even including a single African person in the meeting.
In 2026, youth development in South Africa is still largely designed, funded, evaluated, and governed by people who have never lived the reality of Diepsloot, Khayelitsha, KwaMashu, Lebowakgomo, or Mamelodi.
And the result is the same: fragmentation.
Dependency.
Stagnation.
And an industry that profits from our problems without solving them.
We are done being polite about it.
A National Analysis titled Fractured Futures has been released.
It names what is happening.
It names who benefits.
And it proposes a National Blueprint for Reform.
Next issue: we follow the money.
R80 billion a year in youth development.
Where does it actually go?
Share this.
Send it to someone in your community who needs to read it.
And tell us in the comments what your experience with youth development programmes in your municipality or province has been.
Your story is part of the evidence.


