Economic Growth

These rich countries have high levels of child poverty

Kadee Ingram, 28, holds her son Sean, 2, at SHARE/WHEEL Tent City 3 outside Seattle, Washington October 13, 2015. Ingram lost her job, and soon afterwards her partner Renee lost her job. "It got (to) the point where we couldn't get a job fast enough and we lost our apartment," Ingram said. "Coming here, we really like it, being outside especially, we feel safe. We wish we would have known about it sooner."  REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton PICTURE 17 OF 35 - SEARCH "STAPLETON TENTS" FOR ALL IMAGES TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY      TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY      - RTX1Z3JC

The United States performs poorly in the child equality rankings. Image: REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

Charlotte Edmond
Senior Writer, Forum Agenda
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One in five children in rich countries lives in relative poverty. And one in eight risks going hungry or not getting the right food.

A new Unicef report ranked 41 of the world’s wealthiest countries on how well prepared they are to meet the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals most relevant to child well-being.

It warned that in many of the countries studied higher incomes have failed to improve the lives of all children. This was notably the case in the United States and United Kingdom, where one in five children faces food insecurity. In comparatively poorer Mexico and Turkey this figure rises to one in three.

Unicef defines relative child poverty as living in a household whose disposable income, taking into account the size of the family, is less than 50% of the median income for the country in which they live.

Image: UNICEF Innocenti

There are wide variations in child poverty levels between countries. In Denmark, Norway and Iceland, one in 10 children lives in poverty, compared to one in three in Israel and Romania.

Again, the US performs badly against this indicator, as does Spain. In fact, 17 of the 41 countries have above average levels (21%) of children living in poverty.

Image: UNICEF Innocenti

The best and worst performers on child well-being

Overall, the countries that performed best across the indicators on children’s well-being were the Nordic nations, Germany and Switzerland. At the bottom of the league table were Chile, Bulgaria, Romania, Mexico and the US.

However, the report points out that there is room for improvement in all countries, with each ranking in the middle or bottom third for at least two of the goals. Across Europe one child in three is deprived in at least two ways.

Image: UNICEF Innocenti

There has been significant progress in some areas with falls in neonatal mortality, adolescent suicides, teenage births and drinking.

However, on other indicators – income inequality, adolescent self-reported mental health and obesity – rich countries are actually on a downward trajectory.

The United Nations World Food Programme defines food security as having reliable and consistent access at all times to sufficient, safe, nutritious food to maintain a healthy and active life.

In two thirds of the countries, children from the poorest households are now worse off than they were in 2008. Obesity rates among 11-15 year olds are climbing, and so is the number of adolescents reporting two or more mental health problems a week.

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