A recent report by the United Nation’s Children’s Fund (UNICEF)
details the growing levels of poverty facing children in the major
capitalist countries.
Compiled with information taken in the final two years of last
decade (2009-2010), the report reveals a staggering level of child
poverty in the “developed” world, with the standards of living in the
United States, which has the highest gross domestic product, ranking
near the bottom on all metrics.
Entitled “Child Well-Being in Rich Countries,” the study measures
living conditions faced by children in major capitalist countries of
North America, Europe, Oceania, and parts of Asia. The countries are
ranked by several criteria: material well-being, education, health and
safety, behaviors and risks, and housing and environment.
Roughly one in seven children within the United States currently
lives in poverty. According to the overall metric, the US ranks 26 out
of 29, behind Greece and just above Lithuania, Latvia and Romania. On
the education metric, it comes in 27, while on the material well-being
metric it comes in at 26.
The report notes that the United States, which has the world’s
highest gross domestic product, has remained at the bottom of the list
throughout the past decade.
In the areas of material well-being, the report focuses on individual
countries’ poverty rates and the relative gap between the median income
and children classified as poor. In the United States, the average
child in poverty was an estimated 36 percent below the official poverty
line, ranking with nations such as Italy and Greece.
The official poverty line is taken to be 50 percent of the median
income level of any particular country. This is itself absurdly low,
with many families above the poverty line still living in extremely
difficult circumstances.
The report briefly outlines the importance of child well-being,
stating that “failure to protect and promote the well-being of children
is associated with increased risk across a wide range of later-life
outcomes… From impaired cognitive development to lower levels of school
achievement, from reduced skills and expectations to lower productivity
and earnings.”
Of particular note is the infant mortality rate, included in the
“health and safety” section of the report. The findings single out the
United States, Great Britain and Canada, three of the world’s wealthiest
nations, all of which fall into the lowest rankings for preventing
infant deaths. Results were similar in remaining categories, with the
United States possessing homicide rates of nearly eight deaths per
100,000 individuals, higher than Libya in 2008 (the last year in which
statistics are available).
The nations with the highest levels of childhood well-being were
concentrated within Nordic countries and Western Europe, which still
retain relatively more developed social reforms, though these are under
relentless attack. Finland had less than 5 percent child poverty.
The majority of the findings are constructed from data collected in
2009-2010, the most recent period available for all relevant criteria.
Noting the apparent inadequacy of this due to the economic crisis’
continuing impact, the report mentions that such information would prove
difficult to come by “in the best of times,” adding that the past few
years have been “far from the best of times.”
Poverty has soared in Europe since the data in this report was
recorded. The past three years have seen a series of ever more brutal
austerity measure as a condition for bank bailouts organized by the
European Union, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central
Bank.
According to the assessment of education in the most developed
countries, including the percentage of youth enrolled in preschool, the
US is again one of only several countries whose child population falls
below 80 percent in this category.
In his 2013 State of the Union address, President Barack Obama touted
an initiative toward the expansion of the Federal Head Start program,
stating his intention to make “high-quality preschool available to every
child in America.” This is empty demagogy. In fact, the Obama
administration is presiding over an historic attack on public education,
with hundreds of schools shut down and hundreds of thousands of
teachers laid off over the past four years.
The conditions of young people in the United States is a devastating
indictment of American capitalism and the two big business parties. Over
the past four decades, social inequality has soared to levels not seen
since before the Great Depression of the 1930s. The rise of a financial
aristocracy has been accompanied by a relentless attack on jobs, wages
and social programs. The United States in turn has become a model for
ruling classes all over the world.
Since the onset of the world economic crisis in 2008, the attack on
the working class has only intensified. Trillions of dollars have been
handed to the banks, while the Obama administration is now spearheading a
drive to slash hundreds of billions from core social programs,
including Social Security and Medicare. The consequences for child
poverty and many other metrics of social inequality and distress are not
hard to predict.
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