Thank you again for your question.
I think the kinds of solutions that are effective are those that are comprehensive. When we have a piecemeal or targeted policy here and there, someone is left out; there's some impact on another part of a person's life. For example, if in my poverty there is help for housing, it's quite possible that another part of my whole life would be affected, and likewise for the nation. There are some people who are left out. Most reduction strategies focus on families with children, but not on those who are single with no children and between the ages of 55 and 65, for example.
It has to be comprehensive. It has to touch everyone, because everyone has human rights and rights to housing, food, shelter, and clean drinking water, and so forth. It has to be comprehensive, and not piecemeal or targeted. We have to look at the whole picture.