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: Britain
Scotland report exposes child poverty
By Niall Green
8 February 2002
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Last month the Scottish branch of the National Childrens
Home charity (NCH) released the first of a series of reports that
reveals the extent of poverty and deprivation in Scotland.
Compiled from official statistics, Factfile Scotland
paints a damning picture of social inequality and its impact on
tens of thousands of young people. At the end of an economic boom
that has lasted since the mid-1990s, social divisions have become
even more pronounced. While Britain has more millionaires than
ever, levels of social redistribution of wealth are at a postwar
low.
Co-funded by the devolved Scottish Executive, the report found
that in Scotland 310,000 children up to the age of 16 live in
households officially defined as poor (receiving less than half
average income). This means that around 25 percent of children
live in households that are reliant on Income Support, a benefit
paid by central government to the most socially disadvantaged.
Those born poor are more likely to experience poverty, ill
health, and drug and alcohol problems throughout their lives.
In addition, young people from poor backgrounds were found
to be three times more likely than the national average to be
injured in road traffic accidents and are far more likely to get
in trouble with the police. Some 10,000 young people have at least
one parent that has spent time in prison.
Educational attainments are also deeply affected by poverty,
with poor students more likely to be excluded from school and
less likely to go on to university.
Glasgow, Scotlands largest city, is singled out for the
high levels of poverty concentrated within its boundaries. Some
42 percent of those under the age of 16 live in a household dependent
on Income Support. Only 17 percent of those leaving Glasgows
state schools go on to higher education, compared with 50 percent
from the affluent suburban area of East Renfrewshire, just outside
the city. In Glasgow itself, amidst malnutrition and within walking
distance of slum housing, a prestigious new development of apartments
in the gentrified Merchant City area offer luxury living for between
one quarter and half a million pounds.
Thousands of the citys pupils are entitled to a free
school mealin many cases the only hot or vaguely nutritious
meal they will eat in a day. Perhaps the most shocking figure
is that 20 percent of all children attending the Yorkhill Sick
Childrens hospital in Glasgow have shown signs of malnutrition.
The Labour-led Scottish Executive has welcomed the report as
a starting point that will allow them to tackle social exclusion,
but this caring rhetoric contrasts with Labours record in
office both in Scotland and Westminster.
The growth of social inequality, which accelerated under the
Conservative governments from 1979-1997, has continued under Labour.
These levels of deprivation are mirrored across the UK. It has
been estimated that five million people in Britain suffer from
food poverty, unable to feed themselves with enough
nourishing food to ensure good health.
In June 2000, a survey by the United Nations Children Fund
(UNICEF) reported that the level of child poverty in the UK is
among the worst in the developed world. UNICEF placed the UK twentieth
out of 23 countries in their table of relative poverty, and found
that the number of families suffering from poverty had risen much
more rapidly in Britain than in most other west European states.
Over the last quarter century the British ruling class has
been among the most vigorous enforcers of welfare cuts and market
liberalisation. Removing restrictions on the accumulation of capital
far more quickly than other countries in the European Union, Britain
has experienced social polarisation on a greater scale. Programs
redistributing wealth have been slashed in the interest of improving
returns for businesses, with catastrophic results for millions
of people, especially the most vulnerable groups in society.
See Also:
Latest survey shows
wealth and poverty side-by-side across Britain
[9 February 2001]
Britains general
election: The disenfranchisement of the working class and the
need for a new socialist party
[17 May 2001]
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