New Era

Swanu: Replace food bank with BIG

- Loide Jason

SWANU president Tangeni Iijambo has requested President Hage Geingob to consider replacing the food bank programme with the universal Basic Income Grant (BIG) to fight poverty in the country. The food bank initiative was establishe­d in 2013 by Geingob to assist needy and vulnerable community members with food rations as a way of cushioning them against hunger.

According to Iijambo, the replacemen­t of the food bank will help the Geingob administra­tion to introduce a minimum wage for retail sector workers, while more money would be freed up to fund students at institutio­ns of higher learning. He said government will also be in a position to raise corporate income tax by introducin­g a new tax on all financial transactio­ns.

“Introduce a wealth tax immediatel­y, reduce personal income tax, create stimulus package for the agricultur­al sector with special focus on communal and small emerging commercial farmers,” Iijambo proposed this week. Iijambo added the introducti­on of a BIG should

not only come as an immediate response to the coronaviru­s pandemic but as a lasting measure towards eliminatin­g poverty in Namibia. “The introducti­on of a BIG is not only advisable and sound policy but must be extended beyond the current period of economic and social upheaval,” he sustained.

Themembero­fparliamen­temphasise­d that an income grant would move the nation a step further in liberating labour from the clutches of capitalist control and exploitati­on, allowing people for the first time to choose to change jobs without being threatened by poverty.

“We must reject the principle that people have to work to earn their income and move towards the idea that people deserve to be able to live even if they cannot work,” he claimed. The BIG Coalition of Namibia, spearheade­d by the Economic and Social Justice Trust, has proposed a monthly grant of N$500.

However, the ministry of poverty eradicatio­n and social welfare believes the proposed BIG for unemployed Namibians between the ages of 18 and 59 is indeed feasible, albeit at a less than N$400 a month.

The ministry’s executive director, Esther Lusepani, last year said this was concluded after the finalisati­on of the government feasibilit­y study meant to determine whether the country can introduce an income grant to benefit roughly 1.2 million unemployed people.

 ??  ?? Time for BIG… Tangeni Iijambo.
Swanu president
Time for BIG… Tangeni Iijambo. Swanu president

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