1 / 16

Session 1: Child poverty outcomes and main factors behind International benchmarking and key challenges for Member S

Child poverty and child well-being: better monitoring for better policies Brussels, 26 November 2009. Session 1: Child poverty outcomes and main factors behind International benchmarking and key challenges for Member States András Gábos TARKI Social Research Institute.

noel
Télécharger la présentation

Session 1: Child poverty outcomes and main factors behind International benchmarking and key challenges for Member S

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Child poverty and child well-being: better monitoring for better policies Brussels, 26 November 2009 Session 1: Child poverty outcomes and main factors behind International benchmarking and key challenges for Member States András Gábos TARKISocial Research Institute

  2. International benchmarking and key challenges for each Member State • To assess the performance of countries in the field of child poverty (and well-being) relative to • The national average/adult population • The EU-average • Following the EU Task Force (2008) methodology • Four dimesions: 1 on outcome side and 3 on determinant side • Child poverty risk outcomes • Joblessness • In-work poverty • Impact of social transfers • Other aspects (material deprivarion, housing, non-material well-being) are also dealt with in the Study

  3. Poverty among children, in general, is higher than that of the overall population • Every fifth child is at-risk-of-poverty in the EU-27 • Child poverty is specifically high in the two newest MSs: BG and RO • Much higher than the population average: CZ, HU • Lower than the population average in: DK, DE, EE, CY, SI, FI ----------------------------------------- • The severity of poverty is more similar to the population as a whole • Relatively high in: BG, RO, Baltic States • Relatively low in: FR, CY, FI, SE • Positive correlation between extent and severity, and also between extent and persistence At-risk-of-poverty rates: overall population and children, EU-27, 2007 Source: EUROSTAT High persistence: LT, PT, ES, PL, IT, but not in the UK

  4. Almost 1 children in 10 in the EU lives in jobless households Share of children (0-17) and adults (18-59 – not students) living in jobless households, EU-27*, 2007 (%) • Reasons for joblessness can be found on both the supply and demand side • Lack of or inedaquate human capital of parents • Counter-incentives of income supports • Shortage of childcare • Regional and/or ethnic segregation • The risk of poverty among children is inevitably linked to the underlying structure of the households in which they live • Children in jobless households are likely to live in lone parent families: BE, EE, IE and the UK • Children in large families are affected in HU Source: EU LFS *No data avalaible for Sweden

  5. Sensitivity of risk of poverty rate to alternative measures of low work intensity (based on EU-SILC) Source: own calculations based on EU-SILC 2007. Note. BG, MT and RO are not included.

  6. Most of children live in households where at least one person is in full-time employment • Similar share of children in in-work (WI>=0.50) households across countries • Large variation in the risk of poverty • High in Southern countries, Baltic States, LU, PL • Reasons behind • Low wages • Insufficient labour supply of parents (shortage of childcare, social norms, etc.) • Only one parent in employment • Part-time work In-work poverty (WI>=0.50) in the European Union* Source: own calculations based on EU-SILC 2007 *No data available for analysis for BG, MT and RO

  7. Children in one-earner households are at four times higher risk than those in two-earner households in the EU Children in one-earner households (WI=0.50) in the European Union* • High share, high risk: EL, ES, IT • Low share, high risk: LV, LT, PL, PT • In general, having both parents employed, is the best way of avoiding the risk of poverty • Two-earner model: Nordic countries, CY, SI • 1+1/2 earner model: NL and at some extent in DE (also SE, AT) • Where the incidence of part-time employment of mothers is high, their children face comparably low risk of poverty as their peers in two-earner households do Source: own calculations based on EU-SILC 2007 *No data available for analysis for BG, MT and RO

  8. Social transfers reduce the proportion of children at risk of poverty by 42% in the EU as a whole Distribution towards children at-risk-of-poverty and the effectiveness of social transfers (excl. pensions), EU* • The effectiveness of transfers reflects both the scale of expenditure level and the extent of targeting • Highest impact in: DK, FI, SE, as well as in DE, FR, HU, AT, SI • Lowest: EL, ES, IT • Serious limitations of the EU-SILC • No behavioural responses are considered • No full account of taxes and social contributions • No account of transfers via the tax system • Hard to identify child-contingent payments • Effects are likely to be over-estimated Source: own calculations based on EU-SILC 2007 *No data available for analysis for BG, MT and RO

  9. Relative outcomes of countries related to child poverty risk and main determinants Group A: good performers in all dimensions

  10. Relative outcomes of countries related to child poverty risk and main determinants Group B: joblessness is key challenge

  11. Relative outcomes of countries related to child poverty risk and main determinants Group C: relatively bad performance in all dimensions Group D: in-work poverty is key challenge

  12. Thank you for your attention! www.tarki.hu

  13. Sensitivity of risk of poverty rate to alternative measures of low work intensity (based on EU-SILC)

  14. Probit estimates on marginal effects for child poverty

  15. The risk of poverty living with a mother in part-time emplyoment relative to those with full-time employed mothers

More Related