Matloga, S. T.Maela, K. D.Booi, Shandukani Thendo2026-06-192026-06-192026-05-19Booi, S.T. 2026. The impact of training and development on institutional performance in Vhembe District Municipality. . .https://univendspace.univen.ac.za/handle/11602/3262MPMDepartment of Public and Development AdministrationThis study investigated the impact of training and development on institutional performance within the Vhembe District Municipality. Despite the existence of legislative and policy frameworks such as the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa (1996), the Municipal Systems Act (2000), the Municipal Structures Act (1998), and the Skills Development Act (1998), many municipalities continue to experience persistent service delivery challenges. This suggests that such challenges may stem less from policy absence than from weaknesses in the strategic alignment, implementation, and evaluation of training and development initiatives. Guided by Becker’s Human Capital Theory (1964) and the United Nations Development Programme’s Capacity Building Theory (1991), the study adopted a mixed methods design. Quantitative and qualitative data were collected through structured questionnaires administered to municipal employees and semi-structured interviews with senior municipal officials. The study included 40 participants selected through purposive and convenience sampling, and the data were analysed using both quantitative and qualitative techniques. The findings indicate that training and development initiatives had a limited and uneven impact on institutional performance, improving employee morale and motivation but failing to produce sustained improvements in service delivery, organisational effectiveness, and departmental performance. These limitations were attributed to weak leadership ownership, poor alignment with job requirements, inadequate skills audits, inconsistent implementation, insufficient post training support, and the absence of effective monitoring and evaluation systems. The study concludes that training and development can contribute meaningfully to institutional performance only when strategically embedded within organisational planning, performance management, and capacity development systems rather than implemented as a compliance driven administrative activity. It therefore recommends a strategic reorientation of training and development through stronger senior management ownership, institutionalised skills audits, improved alignment with job roles, enhanced post training support, and the implementation of standardised monitoring and evaluation systems to ensure sustainable impact and improved service delivery outcomes. The major finding of this study is: Training and development were not strategically embedded, were inconsistently implemented and poorly aligned with job requirements, and had limited impact on performance and service delivery due to weak leadership and inadequate monitoring and support. The major recommendation based on the study findings is: A strategic reorientation of training and development through stronger senior management ownership, improved alignment with job roles, enhanced post-training support, and standardised monitoring and evaluation systems to ensure sustainable impact and improved service delivery outcomes.1 online resource (xx, 222 leaves): color illustrationsenUniversity of VendaCapacity buildingUCTDDevelopmentInstitutional performanceService deliveryTrainingVhembe District MunicipalitiesThe impact of training and development on institutional performance in Vhembe District MunicipalityDissertationBooi ST. The impact of training and development on institutional performance in Vhembe District Municipality. []. , 2026 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from:Booi, S. T. (2026). <i>The impact of training and development on institutional performance in Vhembe District Municipality</i>. (). . Retrieved fromBooi, Shandukani Thendo. <i>"The impact of training and development on institutional performance in Vhembe District Municipality."</i> ., , 2026.TY - Dissertation AU - Booi, Shandukani Thendo AB - This study investigated the impact of training and development on institutional performance within the Vhembe District Municipality. Despite the existence of legislative and policy frameworks such as the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa (1996), the Municipal Systems Act (2000), the Municipal Structures Act (1998), and the Skills Development Act (1998), many municipalities continue to experience persistent service delivery challenges. This suggests that such challenges may stem less from policy absence than from weaknesses in the strategic alignment, implementation, and evaluation of training and development initiatives. Guided by Becker’s Human Capital Theory (1964) and the United Nations Development Programme’s Capacity Building Theory (1991), the study adopted a mixed methods design. Quantitative and qualitative data were collected through structured questionnaires administered to municipal employees and semi-structured interviews with senior municipal officials. The study included 40 participants selected through purposive and convenience sampling, and the data were analysed using both quantitative and qualitative techniques. The findings indicate that training and development initiatives had a limited and uneven impact on institutional performance, improving employee morale and motivation but failing to produce sustained improvements in service delivery, organisational effectiveness, and departmental performance. These limitations were attributed to weak leadership ownership, poor alignment with job requirements, inadequate skills audits, inconsistent implementation, insufficient post training support, and the absence of effective monitoring and evaluation systems. The study concludes that training and development can contribute meaningfully to institutional performance only when strategically embedded within organisational planning, performance management, and capacity development systems rather than implemented as a compliance driven administrative activity. It therefore recommends a strategic reorientation of training and development through stronger senior management ownership, institutionalised skills audits, improved alignment with job roles, enhanced post training support, and the implementation of standardised monitoring and evaluation systems to ensure sustainable impact and improved service delivery outcomes. The major finding of this study is: Training and development were not strategically embedded, were inconsistently implemented and poorly aligned with job requirements, and had limited impact on performance and service delivery due to weak leadership and inadequate monitoring and support. The major recommendation based on the study findings is: A strategic reorientation of training and development through stronger senior management ownership, improved alignment with job roles, enhanced post-training support, and standardised monitoring and evaluation systems to ensure sustainable impact and improved service delivery outcomes. DA - 2026-05-19 DB - ResearchSpace DP - Univen KW - Capacity building KW - Development KW - Institutional performance KW - Service delivery KW - Training KW - Vhembe District Municipalities LK - https://univendspace.univen.ac.za PY - 2026 T1 - The impact of training and development on institutional performance in Vhembe District Municipality TI - The impact of training and development on institutional performance in Vhembe District Municipality UR - ER -