Thursday, March 1, 2018

Impact of Child Poverty Damaging

Child poverty rates in New Zealand are above the average of other developed countries. 290,000 children – around 27% of Kiwi kids – are currently living in income poverty and it’s costing us dearly.

UNICEF defines child poverty as children being deprived of the material, spiritual and emotional resources needed to survive, develop and thrive. This leaves them unable to enjoy their rights, achieve their full potential or participate as full and equal members of society.

Each day, around 15% of children leave for school without having eaten breakfast. Around 20,000 children a year, mostly from low income families, will be admitted to hospital for respiratory illnesses and serious skin infections caused by poor housing and overcrowding.

Living in poverty can mean homelessness, not having access to healthy food, going to school hungry, or coming home to a cold damp house to sleep in a shared bed. It can mean missing out on activities like learning a musical instrument or playing sport, or even having a birthday party.

The effects of living in poverty, year after year, on children are cumulative.

For example young children growing up in poverty are more likely to have lower school achievement and impaired health and development. A child from a low income household has a 1.4 times higher risk of dying than a child from a wealthy household.

Poverty damages. It damages childhood, it damages life chances, and it damages us all in society.

As much as $10billion of public money is required every year to deal with the negative consequences of child poverty and around three quarters of that is avoidable.

Parents who are struggling to provide the basic necessities are often unable to spend much quality time with their children, leading to low self-esteem & lifelong difficulties forming strong relationships with others. It will have a negative impact on children’s emotional health.

47% of the children living below the poverty line, live in two parent families, with a range of educational qualifications. A post school qualification or degree does not protect families from being poor.

In spite of a rise in incomes, poverty has remained persistent, mostly due to increased housing costs eating into more of the family budget. A family earning $35,000 per year, paying rent of $404 a week, has $21,008 per year to pay for everything else life requires. If they are lucky they may get additional support from the accommodation supplement, although an income of $35,000 is over the limit for the accommodation or childcare supplement.

Since the 1980’s New Zealand’s income inequality has grown more than any other OECD nation. In 2016 New Zealanders voted (in the Mood of the Nation Poll) inequality and poverty as the most important National issues.

So maybe we should heed the words of Gabriela Mistral - a Chilean poet, diplomat, educator, humanist and Nobel Prize winner – “Many things we need can wait. The child cannot. Now is the time their bones are being formed; their blood is being made; their mind is being developed. To them we cannot say tomorrow. Their name is today.”



Impact of Child Poverty Damaging
First published in the Franklin County News, page 9, on 1 March 2018 











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