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Chikunga Calls for Stronger BRICS Alliance to Unlock Women’s Economic Power

Pretoria: Minister in the Presidency for Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities Sindisiwe Chikunga has called for a stronger BRICS partnership to accelerate women's economic empowerment, saying the bloc has the potential to become a global force for women-led development. Addressing the BRICS Ministerial Meeting on Women's Affairs virtually on Wednesday, Chikunga emphasized that women's empowerment must be regarded as a core driver of economic growth, innovation, and sustainable development, rather than merely a social policy issue.

According to South African Government News Agency, the BRICS grouping-comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, and newer members Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates-represents major emerging markets and developing countries, with a growing share of global economic output. Across these nations, women are increasingly contributing to entrepreneurship, innovation, agriculture, digital services, and community development, yet many still face barriers to finance, leadership opportunities, technology access, and equal participation in the economy.

Chikunga stated that closer cooperation among BRICS nations is crucial to eliminating these barriers, expanding women's participation in leadership and decision-making, and improving access to finance, entrepreneurship, education, and digital opportunities. 'Through the leadership of India [BRICS 2026 chair], we believe this platform will help us advance joint initiatives on women-led development-recognizing women as leaders, entrepreneurs, innovators, and drivers of sustainable change across our economies,' she said.

The Minister remarked that the meeting's focus areas-governance and leadership, financial and digital inclusion, entrepreneurship and skills, climate action, food security, and nutrition-are deeply interconnected and critical to achieving meaningful gender equality. The BRICS Ministerial Meeting on Women's Affairs was established during South Africa's BRICS chairship in 2023 to create a dedicated platform for Member States to coordinate efforts on women's rights, economic empowerment, and inclusive development. Since its inception, the forum has become an important mechanism for sharing policy experiences and identifying practical ways to increase women's participation in the economy.

Highlighting South Africa's efforts, Chikunga mentioned that the government is finalizing a Women's Economic Assembly framework aimed at increasing women's representation in procurement structures, state-owned enterprise boards, and decision-making bodies across both the public and private sectors. She noted that the initiative is grounded in Section 9 of the Constitution and seeks to move women beyond consultative participation to meaningful representation and influence.

On financial inclusion, Chikunga indicated that South Africa is advancing a Cooperative Banking Institution Initiative designed to help close the estimated US$1.7 trillion global financing gap faced by women entrepreneurs. This initiative aims to build a women-owned and women-controlled banking architecture that addresses challenges such as limited collateral, gender bias in lending, and financial products that do not adequately serve women.

Chikunga also highlighted the role of social protection programs, including the Child Support Grant, which reaches more than 13 million children, as well as the Older Persons Grant, Disability Grant, and Social Relief of Distress Grant, which provide critical support to millions of women, who are the primary caregivers in many households. She mentioned that the implementation of the Public Procurement Act, which sets aside 7% of public procurement opportunities for businesses owned by women, youth, and persons with disabilities, is among the most ambitious empowerment interventions on the African continent.

On climate change and food security, the Minister stated that Cabinet has adopted the Climate Change and Disability Impact Report and is integrating gender-responsive measures into climate adaptation, disaster response, and food security programs. She emphasized that women farmers, small-scale food producers, and women working in the informal food economy are being placed at the center of South Africa's response to climate-related challenges.

Chikunga concluded by expressing South Africa's readiness to work with India and all BRICS member states to convert these commitments into measurable progress in the lives of women across the economies.