Most Children Globally Lack Social Protection Coverage

by Lisa Schlein/Voice of America

FILE – Syrian children queue to receive food distributed by humanitarian aid workers at a makeshift camp for displaced people, near the village of Yazi Bagh, Feb. 7, 2018.

A joint study by the International Labor Organization and U.N. Children’s Fund finds the vast majority of the world’s children lack effective social protection coverage. It says this dooms them to a life of extreme poverty, with negative implications for society.

The study finds only one third of children between zero and 14 years of age have any social protection. That means two-thirds, or 1.3 billion children live without a social safety net.

International Labor Organization Social Protection Department Director Isabel Ortiz says just slightly more than one percent of GDP is allocated to social protection for children. She says this huge under-investment gap needs to be covered.

“And, of course, the numbers worsen as we go by region. In Africa, for instance, children represent 40 percent of the African population overall. However, only 0.6 percent is actually invested in social protection for children,” she said.

The report finds children fare best in Europe and Central Asia where 87 percent have social protection coverage, followed by children in the Americas with 66 percent. Asia and Africa have the worst records. The report says no data is available on the Arab States.

The report highlights the impact extreme poverty has upon the lives of children and the societies in which they live. Chief of the U.N. Children’s Fund Child Poverty and Social Protection Unit, David Stewart, says 385 million children are living on under $1.90 a day.

“I think one of the most striking statistics, which emerges is that children are two times as likely to be living in poverty as adults,” he said. “Now, for children it is particularly concerning because poverty can have a lifetime implication for children. You do not have a second chance at nutrition, at health care, and education.”

Stewart says this has negative implications for children, and for societies and economies as well.

The ILO and UNICEF recommend the rapid expansion of social protection for children including the consideration of universal cash grants to children. Authors of the report say evidence clearly shows cash transfers play a vital role in breaking the vicious cycle of poverty and vulnerability.

Popular

MRT-3, LRT-2 logs highest post-pandemic riderships due to PBBM’s ‘Libreng Sakay’

By Brian Campued Over 1.2 million passengers benefitted from the government's “libreng sakay” program on Wednesday following President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s directive, according to...

PBBM honors laborers, assures them of further gov’t support

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet In a Labor Day message on Thursday, May 1, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. honored Filipino workers whom he described as...

PH, New Zealand ink visiting forces deal to bolster defense ties

By Brian Campued The Philippines and New Zealand on Wednesday signed the treaty documents for the Status of Visiting Forces Agreement (SOVFA), which would enable...

All residents eligible for P20/kg rice on May 1 Cebu rollout — Palace

By Darryl John Esguerra | Philippine News Agency Everyone, regardless of income status, will be eligible to purchase rice at P20 per kilo on May...