Tanzania: Oxfam calls for massive post-Ebola Marshall Plan

posted in: Africa, Afrique

Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (PANA) – International agency Oxfam has called for a multi-million dollar post-Ebola ‘Marshall Plan’ to put the three West African countries hit by the crisis back on their feet.

In a statement late Monday, the agency said the world cannot dither on putting the countries’ economies on an inclusive growth plan as it did on the Ebola response.

Key to the success of any recovery package will be addressing three areas of acute need, which Oxfam listed as: immediate cash to millions of families affected by the crisis; investment in jobs; and budget support for essential services such as health, education, water and sanitation.

In addition, the agency called for an international pledging conference to agree recovery plans backed by generous support from rich countries to help efforts to rebuild lives and put the economies back on the road to growth.

Oxfam’s Executive Director Winnie Byanyima said: “People need cash in their hands now, they need good jobs to feed their families in the near future and decent health, education and other essential services. They’ve gone through hell, they cannot be left high and dry.

“The world cannot walk away now that, thankfully, cases of this deadly disease are dropping. Failure to help these countries after surviving Ebola will condemn them to a double-disaster. The world was late in waking up to the Ebola crisis, there can be no excuses for not helping to put these economies and lives back together.”

Oxfam’s research in three Liberian counties found that 73 percent of families have seen their incomes decline, with an average income drop of 39 percent.

One of the effects of lost income is an inability to buy food. Oxfam found 60 percent of people said they had not had enough food in the past seven days. One in four said this was due to a decline in income, one in five said because of high food prices.

To cope with the situation, people have been relying on the generosity of friends and relatives, choosing less expensive food, limiting portion sizes, reducing the number of meals eaten a day and restricting adult consumption in order to allow children to eat.

Since the Ebola outbreak, the World Bank estimates nearly 180,000 people have lost their jobs in Sierra Leone and, in Liberia, half of heads of household are out of work.

In Liberia, the World Bank found that job losses fell disproportionately on women with more women losing their jobs than men. The loss of income is exacerbated by rises in the price of food. In Liberia the price of rice has risen 40 percent above its seasonal average.

Poverty rates in Ebola-hit countries were already high. In Sierra Leone, 56 percent of the population were living under the poverty line, some 64 percent were under the poverty line in Liberia and 40 percent in Guinea.

Before the Ebola crisis, Liberia and Sierra Leone were two of the fastest growing economies in Africa, with annual growth rates of over five percent for Liberia and a staggering projected growth rate of 11.3 percent for Sierra Leone.

Oxfam said it is planning to increase its work to help communities recover from the crisis while still maintaining its Ebola prevention work.

It is also planning to give substantial cash grants to vulnerable families and rehabilitate water and sanitation facilities.

 

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