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Cashless society hurting the homeless

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Image: Ekkasit Jokthong, iStock

The ‘cashless society’ has had unintended consequences. According to the ABC, homeless people are finding harder to bet tge money they need to survive.

Morgan, a homeless man from Melbourne told the ABC that some passer – bys ask him his PayID when he asks for money. Some people buy him grocery gift cards, rather than him cash.

They usually go to a supermarket like Woolworths or Coles and buy me a gift card so that we can walk in and buy what we need.

Morgan prefers people giving cash. It helps people like him get what they need without restriction:

A lot of us like me [sic] haven’t got bank cards or EFTPOS cards to use [making us] really restricted from buying what we want and need.

Experts on homelesness agree. Monetary donations can be essential for a homeless person.

Impact of COVID-19

During the pandemic, the government offered homeless people temporary accommodation. Unfortunately, this ended when restrictions started being lifted.

To Morgan, it proved that the government can offer rough sleepers adequate accommodation if they want to.

A snapshot on homelessness in Australia

Image: Sew reamStudio, iStock

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) offers a snapshot of homelessness.

However, there is little (if any) hard figures on how many people are currently homeless.

The Salvation Army provided these figures based on the 2021 Census:

This is only a small snapshot and is lacking context. It obviously doesn’t count people who don’t access assistance.

What is classed as ‘homeless’?

Homelessness is more than sleeping on the street. According to the Salvation Army, homelessness includes:

Causes

The causes of homelessness include:

Additionally, last year, the Sydney Morning Herald revealed that people increasingly had to choose between paying rent and therapy.

What is the solution?

It’s clear that homelessness is a serious problem. What is the solution?

According to the ABC, stigma towards the homeless is a problem. Stugma causes worse mental and physical health. Poor mental health and homelessness can be a vicious cycle.

An obvious solution pointed out by ABC is increased affordable and social housing.

People who face homelessness also need empathy and compassion. Lizzy, a woman who experienced homelessness, told the ABC:

[Compassion is] one of the most important things. To listen to someone, to not judge them, and just show them respect – that’s often all someone’s looking for

Homelessness is a big issue. It takes governments and individuals having the will to help people out. And it all starts with destigmatising the marginalised. Mental illness services need to be fixed. And, of course, there needs to be more affordable housing.

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