Sowetan

Millions of kids live below poverty line

Household dynamics defying for state

- By Iavan Pijoos

More than six million children in SA live below the food poverty line with many families failing to provide the minimum nutrition needed to survive and thrive.

This was revealed in the South African Child Gauge 2018 report yesterday.

The annual report is published by the Children’s Institute (CI) at the University of Cape Town‚ alongside the DST-NRF Centre of Excellence in Human Developmen­t‚ University of the Witwatersr­and‚ UNICEF South Africa and the Standard Bank Tutuwa Community Foundation. This year marked the 13th Child Gauge report‚ which focused on children at the interface of families and the state. It looked at areas of effective collaborat­ion as well as contestati­on or tension between families and the state.

“In general‚ the state recognises the diversity and multigener­ational nature of many families‚ but in practice different department­s have divergent views of what a family is (or should be) and who is assumed to bear responsibi­lity for children‚” said Katharine Hall‚ senior researcher at CI and lead editor of the report. This was just one of many challenges families faced. According to the report‚ families and household arrangemen­ts were “dynamic‚ responding to social‚ economic and political factors”.

The report found that extended family households accounted for 36% of all households‚ followed by single-person households (22%) – a household form that is increasing as more adults migrate to cities in search of work.

Many migrant adults leave children behind‚ in the care of family.

Only 25% of children live in nuclear families‚ while 62% live in extended family arrangemen­ts. More than sevenmilli­on children live in households headed by a grandparen­t or great-grandparen­t. “What the surveys cannot see is the extent to which families are stretched‚ with members spread across different households.

“Many absent parents see their children regularly and help to support them financiall­y‚ even when they live elsewhere‚” said Zitha Mokomane‚ an associate professor in the department of sociology at the University of Pretoria. The different household dynamics made it challengin­g for the state to target services and benefits for children or their caregivers.

The report found that the child support grant‚ which was designed to follow the child‚ became difficult to achieve when administra­tive systems struggled to keep up with their movement and changing care arrangemen­ts. Despite parents‚ guardians and caregivers having the primary responsibi­lity to inform children about their rights‚ the state was the duty bearer. The state must also provide families with the necessary protection and assistance in order for them to fully assume their responsibi­lities.

 ?? /ESA ALEXANDER ?? Children queue up outside the Yiza Ekhaya Soup Kitchen and Sewing project, a community project based in Khayelitsh­a where Mickey Linda sees to the the needs of her community.
/ESA ALEXANDER Children queue up outside the Yiza Ekhaya Soup Kitchen and Sewing project, a community project based in Khayelitsh­a where Mickey Linda sees to the the needs of her community.

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