Of course these figures are just estimates based on the official definition of child poverty as the percentage of children living in households earning below 60% of median income before housing costs. This definition sounds rather abstract, what living in this category means for many families in practice is children skipping meals, going without new clothes when they need them (such as new shoes or warm winter coats) or missing out on experiences that others take for granted (such as school trips or holidays).
Child poverty by London borough, source: End Child Poverty, Child Poverty Map of the UK, February 2013 |
A 2011 London Assembly report showed that in Lewisham there were more than 4,000 households on the housing waiting list needing at least three bedrooms. The report, Crowded houses: Overcrowding in London's social rented housing recommended building more large family homes. Of course, Councils alone can't build these homes without more Government funding... and that is not forthcoming!
Again, behind these figures are real children sharing beds with their siblings, teenage girls sharing bedrooms with their brothers, nights of disturbed sleep and tired days at school.
With every cut in benefits and wages, with every rent increase, with every housing development approved without enough genuinely affordable housing, the situation for these children is getting worse.
4 comments:
And the feeling that nice holidays and treats are not for the likes of you. It has an effect when you're a child, it can stifle confidence. I felt a bit of a fraud when I went on a holiday abroad for the first time when I started earning!
An interesting article, but when you compare UK definitions of poverty to other countries I'm afraid my sympathy goes more to the poor people outside of the UK who are really suffering from true poverty.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2282764/Hong-Kongs-human-battery-hens-Claustrophobic-images-slum-families-squeeze-lives-tiniest-apartments.html
Thanks for highlighting, T.
@anonymous 15:48 - yes there are children elsewhere in the world who are poorer than most poor children in the UK, but I think it's possible to have enough sympathy/human solidarity to cover both!
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