Multi-Party Charter delivers plan to tackle poverty, inequality

24th April 2024 By: Thabi Shomolekae - Creamer Media Senior Writer

The Multi-Party Charter of South Africa announced on Wednesday its plans to increase the Child Support Grant to the food poverty line and extend the grant to cover pregnant mothers to support child nutrition goals, if it comes into power.

The political parties that make up the Charter presented their plan to build a social relief framework, in which they also committed to an increase in the old age grant, funded by reducing the overall number of people on social grants through a growing economy that would see people into jobs and expand opportunities.

Through a joint press conference, leaders of the Charter parties shared their agreed approach and plans to tackle the biggest crises facing the country.

On Wednesday, the sixth such press conference detailed a Charter government’s plan to build a social relief framework that protected the vulnerable and secured the socioeconomic development needed to break the cycle of poverty, inequality and hunger.

The parties also committed to devising and implementing a plan to reduce teenage and unwanted pregnancies.

The parties said they would identify social welfare beneficiaries by means-testing to ensure that interventions reach those genuinely in need, while also increasing the number of community-based primary health care and social workers to respond to the need for improved welfare services.

The Charter said this would ensure that every community had access to places of safety.

Prioritising the fight against gangsterism and drug abuse, increasing the number of rehabilitation facilities for substance abusers and ensuring that the community had access to the support of social workers, were also some of the plans the Charter had discussed.

The parties highlighted the need to revamp the social housing model to create more housing options near economic centres, while promoting low-cost rental options by initiating a pilot rental voucher system.

The Charter said that it would redistribute State-owned land, particularly in well-located urban areas, to provide housing for people experiencing poverty who would otherwise not be able to afford inner-city housing.

It also highlighted the need to fix the title deed transfer regime and to protect and extend property rights of ownership to as many citizens as possible.

It will ensure that State land is justly and more productively utilised, focusing on residential and agricultural needs, while also increasing access to property ownership and affordable housing.

The Charter will concentrate on repurposing underutilised State-owned land for housing. It will also actively pursue new, innovative housing models, building technologies, funding structures, and community participation initiatives to improve the quality, affordability and flexibility of housing options in South Africa.

The Charter highlighted that while the individual parties within the Charter were campaigning on their own merit, with distinct policies, brands and offerings, voters could confidently cast their vote knowing that these commitments had been agreed to by all the signatory parties to the Multi-Party Charter.

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