/ 22 February 2007

Life gets tougher in Malawi

Grace Kafere is tired. She has been on her feet for close to five hours, bending over as she moves up and down in a forest gathering twigs and branches to sell as firewood.

The 45-year-old single mother of five lost her job as an administrative assistant three years ago when the firm where she was working was restructured. She has been unable to secure another job since then.

To survive, she has had to sell most of her household goods, including a small electrical stove, to raise money for school fees. Her eldest child is 16 years old and in secondary school.

”I have sold all the valuables I have ever owned and am trying small-scale business in order to keep my children in school. I sell everything I can lay my hands on — including wood which I sell to my neighbours who are also struggling to make a living,” says Kafere.

She can no longer afford basic food items such as bread and sugar on a regular basis. Most times, her family only has one meal a day as opposed to the three a day they used to have when she had a job.

Kafere and her family also had to move from the three-bedroom house she had been renting in a low-density area to a one-bedroom shack in the densely populated outskirts of Malawi’s commercial capital, Blantyre. She shares the bedroom with her three daughters and, at night, her sons turn the living room into a bedroom.

As if their living conditions were not bad enough, the Kafere family shares an outdoor kitchen, a toilet and one bathroom with seven other families who stay in similar shacks.

‘Life is getting tougher’

Kafere’s neighbour, Jackson Malire, also decries the poor standards of living. It is becoming worse as the years go by, he says. His family of six people survives on the proceeds from his job as a night watchman where the pay is only about $20 per month.

”I had a bicycle which I bought five years ago, but I had to sell it a year ago because I needed money to pay for hospital bills for my wife. I cannot afford to replace that bicycle. It seems life is getting tougher,” says Malire.

Without the bicycle he has to walk to and from his workplace, which is 25km away from his home.

The dismal experiences of Kafere and Malire are not confined to their neighbourhood. Most Malawians are similarly struggling as poverty has worsened in their country, according to the most recent Human Development Report released by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

Between 2005 and 2006, Malawi dropped from number 10 to number 11 on the list of the world’s 30 poorest countries. It is ranked 166th out of 177 countries on the UNDP’s human development index (HDI).

In 1997, Malawi was ranked 161st, which means it has slipped five places in the past decade. The HDI, according to the UNDP, measures countries’ performance with regard to human development and includes the measurement of standard of living.

More than 65% of Malawi’s 12-million people live below the poverty line of less than $1 a day, while 22% of the population is categorised as ultra-poor.

Some of the more distressing indicators include a maternal mortality rate of more than 1 100 per 100 000 live births, and the deterioration of child mortality rates and access to sanitation and clean water.

Standard of living

A poverty and vulnerability assessment on Malawi released last year by the Malawi government and the World Bank also shows that people’s standard of living has not improved in the past 10 years. The report shows that there has been little or no progress in reducing poverty and inequality.

More than a third of Malawi’s population does not have access to safe water. As a result, people are ill or dying from diarrhoea, cholera and other water-borne diseases. HIV/Aids is also among the major challenges that the country is facing — one in every 10 people is infected.

At an average of 39 years, Malawi has one of the lowest life-expectancy rates in the world, UNDP resident representative Michael Keating points out. The crises in livelihoods are derailing the country’s progress towards achieving the first UN Millennium Development Goal.

Goal number one requires that countries halve the proportion of people living on less than $1 a day and halve the proportion of people who suffer from hunger — by 2015.

While acknowledging that the country is failing to achieve prosperity, government officials contend that Malawi is better off in other areas than other African countries. These include the immunisation of children against measles and tuberculosis, and primary-school enrolment.

The Malawian government is positive that the economy will improve since the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund cancelled most of Malawi’s external debt of about $2,97-billion in September last year. The country had completed economic reforms in adherence with these institutions’ conditionalities.

Malawians are also placing their hope in a promise by the country’s main donor, the British government. The British have pledged $560-million in aid to Malawi over four years. — IPS