Close Menu
John Mahama News
  • Home
  • Ghana News
  • Anti-Corruption
    • Corruption Watch
  • Economic
    • Education & Innovation
  • Environmental
    • Governance & Policy
  • Health & Welfare
    • Historical & Cultural Insights
    • Infrastructure & Development
    • International Relations
  • Ministerial News
    • Presidential Updates
  • Public Opinion
    • Regional Governance
      • Social Issues & Advocacy
      • Youth & Sports
What's Hot

Mid-Year Budget delivers numbers, not jobs – Prof Charles Ackah warns of hollow gains

August 1, 2025

All Mahama’s govt know is ‘GoldBod, GoldBod, GoldBod’ to promote galamsey – Afenyo-Markin

August 1, 2025

Mahama swears in Prof Ayensu-Danquah, Gyakye Quayson, two others as deputy ministers

August 1, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Mid-Year Budget delivers numbers, not jobs – Prof Charles Ackah warns of hollow gains
  • All Mahama’s govt know is ‘GoldBod, GoldBod, GoldBod’ to promote galamsey – Afenyo-Markin
  • Mahama swears in Prof Ayensu-Danquah, Gyakye Quayson, two others as deputy ministers
  • Agradaa, associate file notice of plea bargain in nude photo case 
  • The Surge Of Violence In Ghana’s Senior High Schools One of
  • Last batch of four deputy ministers sworn-in
  • ‘We are sorry’ – Afenyo-Markin apologises to Ghanaians over DDEP
  • Salesgirl jailed 10 years for concealing cocaine in underwear 
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
John Mahama News
Friday, August 1
  • Home
  • Ghana News
  • Anti-Corruption
    • Corruption Watch
  • Economic
    • Education & Innovation
  • Environmental
    • Governance & Policy
  • Health & Welfare
    • Historical & Cultural Insights
    • Infrastructure & Development
    • International Relations
  • Ministerial News
    • Presidential Updates
  • Public Opinion
    • Regional Governance
      • Social Issues & Advocacy
      • Youth & Sports
John Mahama News
Home » 8 policies that would help fight poverty in South Africa’s economic hub Gauteng

8 policies that would help fight poverty in South Africa’s economic hub Gauteng

johnmahamaBy johnmahamaJuly 31, 2025 Social Issues & Advocacy No Comments6 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


- Source:– Source:

Poverty goes beyond income. It often arises when health, education and opportunities fall short of meeting people’s needs.

Individuals are classified as impoverished when they face deprivation in one-third or more of the indicators in a multidimensional poverty index. The index reflects the various influences on socioeconomic class. These include housing, sanitation, electricity, cooking fuel, nutrition and school attendance.

The index is one of the most comprehensive measures of poverty. The fact that the multidimentional index captures multiple dimensions enables it to reflect overlapping disadvantages. And provides a fuller picture of well-being. Other monetary measures such as income aren’t as comprehensive.

About 18% of the world’s population are poor by the definition of the multidimentional poverty index. Sub-Saharan Africa is especially affected, with a multidimensional poverty rate nearing 59%.

In South Africa, it is at around 40%. This means it experiences four in 10 of the dimensions of poverty.

The province of Gauteng is South Africa’s economic hub. Nevertheless it contains pockets of severe deprivation. About 4.6% of households are poor. In some wards up to 68% are severely deprived.

We are social scientists with research histories in food systems and livelihoods, public policy and economics of human capital. We recently conducted a study focused on Gauteng. We wanted to determine what could enable poor and vulnerable households to move out of those categories.

We used a modelling exercise that allowed us to isolate the most relevant factors for this transition.

The study found six factors: education, age, income, working time, medical aid and being a recipient of a low income municipal support grant. We concluded from this that attending to these six variables was the foundation for upward mobility.

Conversely, vulnerability to economic shocks, such as job loss or food insecurity, can trigger rapid downward mobility.

Based on our findings we make eight policy recommendations. These include boosting education and skills training, better healthcare and affordable, reliable transport.

Range of factors

Multidimensional poverty intersects with socioeconomic class structures. It reinforces inequality by placing individuals into hierarchical groups. These range from the affluent and middle class to the transient, vulnerable, and chronically poor.

These disparities shape access to resources, opportunities and upward mobility.

Lower-class households differ from middle-class and affluent (non-poor) households across multiple dimensions. These differences include income stability, consumption patterns, access to services, asset ownership, social capital and vulnerability to shocks.

In the light of this we adopted a multidimensional poverty approach to classify households. We used various dimensions and indicators of poverty to assess the extent of deprivation and associated poverty levels.

We calculated the deprivation score and classified households into three levels: not poor, moderate poverty (vulnerable), and severe poverty (chronically poor).

Working time had the strongest effect. Part- or full-time work greatly lowered odds of severe poverty (chronic poverty) and moderate poverty (transient poverty). Working time refers to the duration that a person is engaged in paid employment or work-related activities. This is usually between 35 and 45 hours per week for full-time employment. And fewer than 35 hours per week for part-time employment.

Some factors only influenced certain groups. For severe poverty, transport access, household health, food parcel reliance, household size, and skipping meals were significant. For moderate poverty, gender, food parcel reliance and skipping meals mattered. And for the vulnerable non-poor (middle class), distance from public transport was the only additional factor.

Social grants and being part of the black population group showed little influence. Transitions and the ability to transcend poverty classes were driven mainly by direct socio-economic factors.

These dynamics underscore the precariousness of low-income households. They also highlight the importance of targeted interventions to break cycles of poverty.

Higher education, stable income and access to full-time work, drastically reduce the odds of remaining in severe or moderate poverty or being vulnerable. Medical aid access and municipal assistance programmes that provide free or subsidised basic services, also serve as protective factors. These help households meet essential health and welfare needs.

However, several structural and socio-economic constraints hinder transitions out of poverty. For example, living a greater distance from public transport increases the likelihood of severe poverty and vulnerability.

Food insecurity, measured by skipping meals or dependence on food parcels, remains a persistent marker of entrenched deprivation.

Gender disparities suggest underlying labour market or social vulnerabilities that require targeted policy interventions. For example, male-headed households are more likely than female-headed households to be moderately poor.

What can be done

Escaping multidimensional poverty in Gauteng requires targeted, practical and complementary interventions. Examples include subsidised transport, decentralised clinics, or housing closer to jobs.

This will enable grants to be translated to improved well-being.

We suggest eight areas for improvement:

access to education, vocational training and digital skills. This will help to increase employment prospects

public works and youth entrepreneurship support. This will boost income generation

social protection like indigent benefits, food vouchers and subsidised medical aid

food security. This can be done through community gardens and nutrition programmes

support for female-headed households and young people

affordable, reliable public transport. Services also need to be decentralised

data-driven municipal planning to guide infrastructure and service investments

consistently tracking progress against defined objectives.

The province implements multiple poverty-reduction initiatives. These include expanded public works, township economy support, food gardens, free basic services, subsidised housing, and public transport projects.

These efforts address income, food security and mobility. But they have limited impact due to persistent barriers. This is because many, particularly young people, don’t have market-relevant skills. In addition, spatial inequality results in long, costly commutes. And housing shortages and rising food prices deepen vulnerability.

Fragmented funding, weak coordination and inadequate data tracking also undermine progress.

Massimiliano Tani receives funding from Australian Research Council (unrelated to this article).

Adrino Mazenda and Catherine Althaus do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

By Adrino Mazenda, Senior Researcher, Associate Professor Economic Management Sciences, University of Pretoria And

Catherine Althaus, Professor, UNSW Sydney And

Massimiliano Tani, Professor of Finance and Economics, UNSW Sydney



Source link

johnmahama
  • Website

Keep Reading

The Surge Of Violence In Ghana’s Senior High Schools One of

Ghana’s Hidden Gem of History and Natural Beauty

Nolle prosequi: Legal but Impolitic

Brain Rot is Real—and My Gallery is the Evidence

A Call For Urgent Transformation, Modernization, And The Inevitable Shift To State Policing

Charly Boy Bus Stop Will Always Resonate With The People

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

GOIL PLC to roll out ambitious innovations to revolutionise fuel retailing

August 1, 2025

ECG launches Loss Reduction Project to boost efficiency, curb power theft

July 31, 2025

Cedi ends July 2025 selling at GHS12.10 on forex market, GHS10.49 interbank

July 31, 2025

Lands Minister extends deadline for small-scale mining licence rectification to end of August

July 31, 2025
Latest Posts

Ghana launches AI bootcamp for cabinet ministers to drive digital governance

July 26, 2025

Ghanaian police, masked man attack journalists covering local election

July 26, 2025

A Bold Vision for Africa’s Digital Future

July 25, 2025

Subscribe to News

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Welcome to JohnMahama.news, your trusted source for the latest news, insights, and updates about the President of Ghana, government policies, and the nation at large. Our mission is to provide accurate, timely, and comprehensive coverage of all things related to the leadership of Ghana, as well as key national issues that impact citizens and communities across the country.

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 johnmahama. Designed by johnmahama.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.