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European blood
08-31-2011, 05:05 AM
One in four New Zealand children live in poverty and spending more on early childhood would reap huge social rewards, according to a new report which ranked New Zealand 28th out of 30 countries in the developed world.

The report was compiled by Every Child Counts - a coalition of organisations and individuals led by Barnardos, Plunket, Unicef, Save the Children and Te Kahui Mana Ririki (a New Zealand Maori children's wellness forum).

New Zealand's low ranking out of 30 OECD nations showed a high teenage birth rate and the worst suicide rate - at more than twice the OECD average.

Education, infant mortality and deprivation also came under the spotlight in the report, which ranked Denmark top, with Israel and Korea also high on the list.

Every Child Counts chairman Murray Edridge said the report, titled "1000 Days to Get it Right for Every Child", showed the low public investment in children's crucial early days of life, at $NZ3 billion ($A2.42 billion), or 1.5 per cent of GDP, resulted in a heavy economic burden - at least three per cent of GDP every year.

"These costs are all preventable," he said.

Maori and Pasifika children were among the children most affected, and were missing out on goods and services, including adequate housing, nutrition, warm clothing, and healthcare.

"Our work identifies a range of potential solutions to improve child outcomes, including community-led development, geographic targeting of family support services, improving the health of women of childbearing age, raising the quality and accessibility of childcare and early childhood education, particularly for Maori, Pasifika and low income communities, investing early in children's lives, creating clear, achievable targets for child well-being outcomes and collecting data to measure progress, and coordinating home visits and centre-based services," Edridge said.

The report has been welcomed by many organisations.

Dennis McKinlay, executive director at Unicef New Zealand, said New Zealand's spend on children should not be considered as a social cost but as an economic investment for the future of the country.

"New Zealand spends $US14,600 ($NZ17,500) per child whilst, in comparison, Scandinavian countries spend $US50,000 per child under six. Other countries, like the Netherlands, spend less but have better outcomes. The stark reality is that poor outcomes for children are costing New Zealand $NZ6 billion per year in areas such as health, welfare services, crime and justice."

http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-world/one-in-four-nz-children-living-in-poverty-20110814-1isoi.html