UNICEF NZ Welcomes Child Poverty Proposals
UNICEF NZ (United Nations Children’s Fund)
Media
Release
Tuesday 28 August, 2012
UNICEF NZ Welcomes Child Poverty
Proposals
With confirmation from the
Ministry of Social Development last week that inequality in
New Zealand is at its highest ever level, UNICEF NZ believes
it is good news that the Children’s Commissioner will
recommend strategies to the Government to reduce child
poverty.
Dennis McKinlay, Executive Director at UNICEF NZ, is confident that the investment approach to alleviating poverty for children (recommended by the Expert Advisory Group that reported to the Children’s Commissioner in the Issues and Options Paper) is the right way to address the persistent poverty that costs our nation over $6b per year in remedial services and even more in lost opportunity and potential.
Mr McKinlay said, “We are encouraged that this paper proposes short term strategies which, given political will, could reasonably quickly begin to benefit the interests of all New Zealanders.
“Targets to reduce poverty; a Child Poverty Act to establish how we measure poverty; reforming the tax credits and having benefits linked to inflation; feeding children in schools; improving housing; and ensuring better access to health and child care services and flexibility in models of delivery can all go a long way to getting it right for every child.”
Longer term solutions such as a universal benefit for every child up to six years old and improving the quality and variety of health care were viable proposals and longitudinal studies to assess the impact of changes are needed.
This echoes
the recent unified statement of a large group of NGO’s in
a recent *Briefing Paper collated by UNICEF NZ. The group
agreed that child poverty, inequality, support for families
and priority to investment in children are at the core of
enhancing child wellbeing and building a better
future.
The Expert Advisory Group also noted the
importance of decent affordable housing - 70% of all
children in poverty live in rental accommodation. Often this
is low-grade and inadequate, contributing to a wider range
of problems including health. There is also a shortage of
housing, with Auckland alone needing an extra 10-15,000
extra homes.
“We have one chance to get it right for
every child,” Mr McKinlay said. “If we fail the 25% of
children who live in poverty now, we are storing up
intractable problems for the future which will have
far-reaching consequences for our country’s future health
and prosperity.”
There is opportunity for comment on
the EAG/ Children’s Commissioner proposals until 12
October. Revisions and costings will be completed before the
final report goes to Government in December.
*Briefing
paper “All Children thriving, belonging, achieving, –
what will it take? (Unicef NZ July 2012) responding to
Government’s Green Paper for Vulnerable Children
-ends-
About
UNICEF
UNICEF is on the ground in over 190
countries and territories to help children survive and
thrive, from early childhood through adolescence.
The world’s largest provider of vaccines for developing countries, UNICEF supports child health and nutrition, good water and sanitation, quality basic education for all boys and girls, and the protection of children from violence, exploitation, and AIDS.
UNICEF is a charity funded entirely by the voluntary contributions of individuals, businesses, foundations and governments.
Every $1 donated to us is worth at least $10 in the field thanks to the way we work in partnership with governments, local NGOs and other partners - www.unicef.org.nz
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