“We must stop treating survival as a privilege”
Mail & Guardian
|M&G 07 November 2025
Interview with Monica Geingos
-
Monica Geingos: Executive Chairperson of the One Economy Foundation, and former First Lady of Namibia.
For Monica Geingos, this line explains the core argument of the new inequality-pandemic report she coauthored. COVID-19, like AIDS before it, protected those with resources and exposed those without. The global system that produced that outcome has not changed.
Geingos, a lawyer, former First Lady of Namibia and longtime adviser on AIDS policy and feminist economics, is one of three co-chairs of the Global Council on Inequality, AIDS and Pandemics. The report released this week argues that inequality is not a background condition to pandemics, but the force that decides how long they last, who dies, and who emerges more powerful. Because inequality exacerbates pandemics, it is a threat to the whole world. The other co-chairs — economist Joseph Stiglitz, epidemiologist Sir Michael Marmot, and the convenor, UNAIDS Executive Director Winnie Byanyima — bring academic influence, multilateral reach and economic authority. Geingos brings something different: the political memory of what happens when lifesaving technology is rationed by income and geography.
She describes inequality as both a public-health risk and a political one. “Inequality drives, deepens and prolongs pandemics. But it also delegitimises authority,” she says. “Anyone who is concerned about collapsing power structures should be concerned about inequality, because it is changing how people respond to power.”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der M&G 07 November 2025-Ausgabe von Mail & Guardian.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Mail & Guardian
Mail & Guardian
Subtle magic of an itinerant statesman
Rasool is perhaps one of the few South African political figures able to articulate the global consequences of misused narratives
5 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Mail & Guardian
Batohi exits NPA on a sour note
Outgoing national director of public prosecutions (NDPP) Shamila Batohi’s testimony at the Nkabinde inquiry has cast a shadow over her seven-year tenure and suggests she was too quick to delegate to her subordinates during her leadership of the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA).
3 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Mail & Guardian
Netflix reimagining December viewing
For many years, South African television has been dominated by festive entertainment rooted in Western culture.
4 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Mail & Guardian
Ramaphosa's tumultuous 2025
Diplomacy, domestic strains and a test of political authority underlined this year's presidency
3 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Mail & Guardian
The politics of literacy
South Africa knows how to teach children to read. What's missing is the political will to do it
4 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Mail & Guardian
Journey through Côte D'ivoire
Abidjan announces itself as a city shaped by water, movement and confidence.
3 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Mail & Guardian
The hustler, the dancer, the dreamer
From Soweto streets to global screens, Mr NT blends hustle, heart and heritage — turning dance into a vehicle for opportunity, community and impact
6 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Mail & Guardian
Padel Promises fuels youth grit
The organisation wants to develop future stars in the fastest growing sport
4 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Mail & Guardian
SA 2025: Scenic route from G20 to NGC
This was the year that was — South Africa's chequered 2025, a year that ends not with resolution, but with reckoning.
5 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Mail & Guardian
Great Lakes strife calls for no bias
US partiality towards one party risks subverting mediator role in Washington Process
3 mins
M&G 19 December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

