Press
Release
UNICEF Launches child poverty report
Child poverty is widespread in the Commonwealth
of Independent States, and Central and Eastern Europe,
despite growing economies throughout the region. Rising
numbers of children are ending up in institutions or
being put up for adoption as families strain to cope,
according to a UNICEF report, the first comprehensive
review of the social side of a decade of transition.
Almost 18 million children and young people living
in poverty in the region, on less than $2.15 a day.
GENEVA, NEW YORK, 29 November 2001 - Child poverty is
widespread in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
and Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), despite growing
economies in the region, says a UNICEF report released
today. Almost 18 million young people are living in poverty
and rising numbers of children are ending up in institutions
or being put up for adoption as families strain to cope.
The report, "A Decade of Transition",
published by the UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre in Florence,
Italy, looks at the standard of living of the over 400
million people who live in the CIS/CEE region. It examines
incomes and child poverty, health, education, demographic
changes, and children in public care. The report finds
huge disparities in the situation of children across the
27 countries in the region and calls for renewed efforts
to grant a better future for all.
"Thanks to a decade of strenuous efforts, child
mortality rates have fallen in many countries. However,
millions of children continue to suffer from poverty,
ill health and marginalization," said Carol Bellamy,
Executive Director of UNICEF.
"Fundamental freedoms have been recognized in most
countries - the right to vote, to express an opinion,
to use one's own initiative and enterprise. This is undeniably
a source of satisfaction and bodes well for the future.
But we must not forget the original goals of the transition
- to raise the standard of living for everyone and to
develop humane and democratic societies. These goals need
to be re-affirmed," said Bellamy.
The report notes that over the last decade the number
of children in poor families has increased sharply as
real incomes have fallen, and inequality has widened.
At the end of the 1990s it is estimated that there were
nearly 18 million children from 0 to 17 years of age living
on less than $2.15 a day, a World Bank yardstick for poverty.
This represents around 17 per cent of that population
age group. The majority of these poor children - 16 million
- were in the CIS, but a further two million were in Central
and Eastern Europe, including the Baltic states and the
countries of the former Yugoslavia. In Moldova, Armenia,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, the majority of children were
poor by the $2.15 yardstick.
The UNICEF report also quotes a higher threshold of poverty
- living under $4.30 a day. Using this figure, the number
of poor children and young people in the region rises
to just under 60 million, well over half the total in
this age group of 108 million.
"A Decade of Transition" points
to a growing gap in the health status of populations in
poorer and richer parts of the region. In Ukraine, Russia
and Armenia, one in seven children is malnourished. In
Albania, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, the figure is one
in three.
In parts of the region, the report finds alarming levels
of school dropout, repetition, and late entry. Secondary
school attendance in Central Asian countries has fallen
from two-thirds in 1989 to less than half of 15 - 18 year-olds
in 1998. Central Europe finished the 1990s with higher
rates. The report notes a recovery or growth in pre-school
enrolment rates over the 1990s in Central Europe, former
Yugoslavia and the Baltic states. Tertiary education has
expanded in all countries but Armenia, Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan.
FACTS AND FIGURES FROM THE REGION:
· The birth of many of the 22 new states has been
peaceful, but ethnic conflict and war have occurred in
more than a third of the region's countries. At the end
of 2000, 2.2 million people were registered as internally
displaced within their own countries, and almost a million
as refugees elsewhere.
· There have been huge demographic shifts. The
total number of children in the region - 108 million -
is about 13 per cent fewer than in 1989. The number of
children aged under 5 fell by over a third, from 36 million
to 23 million. This was due to a sharp drop in births.
Marriage rates also fell by a third on average, and the
average share of non-marital births doubled, from 11 per
cent to 22 per cent.
- Many countries have made substantial progress in
economic reform. By 2000 more than half of the region's
output was being produced in the private sector. The
great majority of economies were growing. However, at
the end of the 1990s the national income per head of
only three countries had surpassed its 1989 level; on
average, it was still 30 per cent down.
- Eight out of 20 key social indicators show progress
between 1989 and 1999 in the majority of countries:
infant mortality, adolescent birth, reduction in abortion,
higher education enrolment, maternal mortality, youth
mortality and life expectancy for both men and women.
But in 17 of the 27 countries the majority of indicators
ended the 1990s registering setbacks. Upper secondary
enrolment rates rose in only eight countries, and the
percentage of 0-3 year-olds in infant homes fell in
only six.
- There were 3.2 million "excess" deaths
in the period 1990-99 in the transition countries, deaths
that would not have occurred had mortality rates stayed
at their 1989 levels. These deaths occurred mostly among
adult males. Of the 22 countries for which data for
1989 and 1999 are available, 15 show an improvement
in life expectancy over the 10 years. Central European
countries registered the biggest rises. By contrast,
life expectancy fell over the decade in the Western
CIS and Central Asia. Russia registered a renewed fall
in 1999 and 2000 following a partial recovery from the
1994 low.
- Cases of HIV/AIDS have skyrocketed in Russia and the
Ukraine. About 90 per cent of the 700,000 people estimated
to have HIV/AIDS in the transition countries at the
end of 2000 were in these two countries. NB. Latest
UNAIDS figures are expected to be considerably higher
and show evidence that the disease has spread in the
mainstream population.
- Tuberculosis has returned to the region with 50 per
cent increases in incidence registered in poorer countries.
Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and Romania are the most affected.
Estonia had the highest incidence of drug-resistant
tuberculosis in a worldwide study of over 50 countries
in the late 1990s.
CHILDREN IN INSTITUTIONS
"I have never seen my mother. I'd like to
see her once at least, but I don't know where to find
her." (Sebastian, 18, Romanian). Quote
from the report.
"A Decade of Transition" finds
that, over ten years after the start of the reforms, even
higher numbers of children are living in public care.
The higher rates of children in out-of-home care reflect
the greater risks faced by children: weaker family ties,
lower household income, poorer access to health and education,
higher rates of adult mortality.
There were 1.5 million children in out-of-home care at
the end of the 1990s, about 150,000 more than at the start
of the decade. A rise has occurred in most parts of the
region (the Caucasus and former Yugoslavia are exceptions),
with the sharpest increase in the Baltic states. Central
Europe has high rates too, in marked contrast to other
social indicators on which this part of the region often
performs the best. The increase in numbers of children
in public care comes despite a fall in the numbers of
young children by over one-third since 1989.
The UNICEF report notes that, contrary to expectations
that adoption should reduce the number of children in
institutions, rises in adoption and institutionalization
have often gone hand in hand. In Belarus, for example,
the rate of adoption rose by 160 per cent over 1989-99,
and the proportion of young children aged 0-3 in infant
homes rose by 170 per cent. In some countries, most spectacularly
in Russia, increases in international adoptions have paralleled
decreases in national adoptions.
Radical reforms of child protection systems in the region
are no less urgently needed now than they were a decade
ago, says the report, which urges stronger preventive
and better targeted policies to help keep children and
their families together.
THE REPORT'S RECOMMENDATIONS:
- On child poverty, the UNICEF report calls for a sustained
attack to address poverty among children including:
(a) moving child poverty centre-stage in national policy
debate, (b) tackling long-term problems that perpetuates
child poverty (educational disadvantage, teenage pregnancy,
ill health) and (c) supporting family incomes through
both economic policy and tax and transfer systems. The
1990s saw a marked reduction in the generosity of family
allowance in many countries in terms of both coverage
and benefit levels.
- On the problem of children in institutions, UNICEF
calls for regular and independent reporting on the quality
of institutional care as well as strengthening the role
of the state as regulator and guarantor of quality rather
than the main provider of out-of-home care. Family support
services should be beefed up, and family-based care
solutions should be encouraged. The report notes that
the introduction or raising of fees for boarding facilities
would reduce demand.
- On education, the report notes the current low levels
of public investment in several countries in the region,
especially in the southern parts. Educational budgets
could be used more efficiently by reducing the number
of teachers, paying them more and on time. The involvement
of parents and employers in a managerial (not only advisory)
role would help ensure the relevance of schools to the
needs of society.
- On health, "A Decade of Transition" says
that a stronger focus is needed on preventative health
care, health education and on public health programmes.
It says that informal payment systems penalize the poor
and recommends that health policies concentrate on adequate
financing, efficiency and equity.
###
For more information, please contact:
Patrick
McCormick, UNICEF Florence, ++ 39 055 2033354, pmccormick@unicef.org
Patrizia Faustini,
UNICEF Florence, ++ 39 055 2033253, pfaustini@unicef.org
Robert Cohen, UNICEF
Baltics Regional Office, 41 22 909 5631, rcohen@unicef.org
Jehane Sedky-Lavandero,
UNICEF New York, (212) 326 - 7269, jsedky@unicef.org
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