BANGKOK, 22 November – A new UNICEF study analysing child
poverty in East Asia and the Pacific emphasizes that poverty affects children
in vastly different ways than adults. As a result, policy makers need to look
beyond family income indicators to gain a more complete picture of poverty and
the deprivations children face.
The study entitled “Child Poverty in East Asia and the
Pacific: Deprivations and Disparities” noted that family poverty often affects
children most directly through their access to shelter, food, water,
sanitation, education, health and information. When a child is deprived of one
or more of these essential services, their experience of poverty deepens.
Analysing the situation of children living in seven East
Asia and Pacific countries with a child population over 93 million, the report
found over 30 million suffered from at least one form of severe deprivation,
such as the inability to go to school, or access basic health care, safe
drinking water, a sanitary toilet or adequate nutrition – and more than 13
million suffered from two or more forms of severe deprivation.
“The study demonstrates that income gains, including in
middle income countries in the region, have not necessarily translated into
gains for all children,” said Mahesh Patel, UNICEF Regional Advisor for Social
Policy. “Any national equity and disparity reduction policy must start with
child poverty reduction at its centre.”
The report reviews child poverty studies carried out in
Cambodia, Lao PDR, Mongolia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vanuatu and Viet Nam
from 2007 to 2010.
“The thorough analysis presented in these national studies
will help countries target programmes and policies to better reach the most
vulnerable in society and to use resources most efficiently,” said Anupama Rao
Singh, UNICEF Regional Director for East Asia and the Pacific.
The seven Asia-Pacific countries were among 53 worldwide
that participated in UNICEF’s Global Study on Child Poverty and Disparity,
which draws attention to the daily deprivations suffered by children and their
negative impact on national development.
In Lao PDR, for example, while 38 per cent of children are
assessed as income poor, as many as 75 per cent are assessed as living in
poverty based on this broader – and increasingly recognized – measure of child
poverty.
In Viet Nam, children from ethnic minority groups are 11
times more likely to suffer from multiple severe deprivations than children
from ethnic majority groups - a pattern found in many other countries.
In Vanuatu, nearly one in five children suffers from severe
health deprivation.
The report also underlines that much more needs to be done
to reduce the disparities that impede the development of large numbers of
children in East Asia and the Pacific. Inequity is rampant, with income
inequality either remaining stagnant or increasing in all seven countries
despite significant GDP growth over much of the last decade. Deprivations and
disparities faced by children must feature prominently in national development
and poverty alleviation plans in the region and inform how resources are allocated.
Child-sensitive social protection policies that address the needs of the most
vulnerable children will also be essential to reducing the deprivations
children face in the region.
Gaps between rural and urban areas, different ethnic groups,
geographic areas, and households headed by well-educated versus poorly educated
adults were among the most notable disparities across the seven countries.
“Clearly the challenge now facing us in East Asia and the
Pacific is to address the additional dimensions of child poverty revealed in
this study, building on, but going beyond the foundation of economic growth in
the region,” Rao Singh said.
The report also revealed the following trends:
Rural versus urban - child poverty was 30 per cent higher in
rural Cambodia than in urban areas, 60 per cent higher in rural Thailand, 130
per cent higher in rural Philippines and 180 per cent higher in rural Viet Nam;
Geographic disparities – sub-national disparities within
countries are, in some instances, more pronounced than the disparities between
lower- and middle-income countries in the region– for example, the number of
children suffering from severe deprivation in Viet Nam was over 6 times higher
in the north-west region than the Red River Delta; and 50 per cent higher in
southern Thailand than the North;
Disparities among ethnic minorities - disproportionately
high levels of poverty and deprivation are evident among some ethnic minority
children. This is an issue in almost all seven countries surveyed in the
region. For example, the number of severely deprived ethnic minority children
was about 60 per cent higher than the number of severely deprived children from
dominant ethnic groups in both Lao PDR and Mongolia, 9 times as large in the
Philippines and nearly 15 times larger in Thailand;
Education of household head- severe deprivation more than
doubled in households where the household head had only a primary-school
education or less, compared to households where the household head had
secondary or higher education;
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