Transcript Document

ISCI conference
Thursday, July 28th 2011
Child poverty across 36 countries
Gaspar Fajth
Solrun Engilbertsdottir
Sharmila Kuruklasuriya
Nicholas Rees
Division of Policy and Practice
UNICEF
• Overview of the Global Study on Child Poverty and
Disparities
• 36 country database - individual level indicators and
household level indicators
• Which measures to focus on to capture multidimensional
child poverty?
Background
• UNICEF’s Global Study on Child Poverty and Disparities
launched in 2008: create momentum and influence
national policy making processes
• Covers 52 countries in 6 continents
Why a Global Study?
Generate evidence, insights and networks that can
be used as leverage to influence national
development plans, and to inspire and feed into
poverty reduction or sector-wide strategies,
common country assessments and other
development instruments
What is child poverty?
UNICEF State of the World’s Children 2005 definition
“Children living in poverty experience deprivation of the
material, spiritual, and emotional resources needed to
survive, develop and thrive, leaving them unable to enjoy
their rights, achieve their full potential or participate as full
and equal members of society.”
Dimensions of Child Poverty
National reports
Impact
• National ownership
• Impacted national development plans and policy
interventions:
– Mali: first national forum on poverty led to formulation
of an action plan on social protection
– Tanzania: created a push for the adoption of the Law
of the Child Act
– Cameroon: findings reflected in the Government’s
and Growth Strategy Paper for 2010 - 2020
– Morocco: Government to officially adopt
multidimensional child poverty indicators
• Where are we now?
• The conceptual foundations of the Study need to be reflected
upon. The Study methodology is based on an approach
developed by the University of Bristol, in early 2000’s – since
then a lot of advances have been made in survey collection
• Comprehensive picture of child poverty:
• Look at various different measures of poverty and evaluate whether
these measures provide us with vastly different pictures of poverty
Individual/ Household
level indicators
•36 country database (MICS/DHS) - 1,444,457 children
•Child level indicators: nutrition, health and education
•Household level indicators: sanitation, water, shelter, information
•Children deprived:
–Individual deprivations only
–Household deprivations only
–Household AND individual deprivations - our focus
•Most indicators proxy indicators for children - measured at household
level
–Individual deprivations measure characteristics of the child - future human capital
–Household deprivations measure aspects of children’s household
environments/community
Country comparison:
Individual and household level indicators
Way forward
• National analysis continues
• The conceptual foundations and coherence are yet to be
reviewed and reflected upon
– Focusing operational poverty concepts more narrowly
on child outcomes, poverty intensity as well as
instability?
– Alternative approaches to measuring child poverty for
middle income countries, conflict-hit areas and fragile
states?
– Regional/global analysis of multidimensional child
poverty?
– Global child poverty index?
– Wide agreement on basic child indicators
• For more information visit
www.unicefglobalstudy.blogspot.com
• Join the Child Poverty Network:
[email protected]