Washington state’s Kids Count says 40,000 children slip into poverty

The annual Kids Count sur­vey for Wash­ing­ton state says that 40,000 chil­dren will into poverty by 2010. The num­bers will wipe out any gains the state has made in fight­ing poverty since 1975.

From The Spokesman Review, writer Shawn Vestal talks to a Kids Count direc­tor and also cites an addi­tional survey.

When Lori Pfin­gst con­sid­ers the sta­tis­tics that will tell the tale of this reces­sion, she isn’t think­ing about GDP or unemployment.

She’s think­ing about teen preg­nancy. Low birth­weight babies. WASL scores and col­lege enrollments.

As the reces­sion swells the ranks of the impov­er­ished, it takes a par­tic­u­lar, long-term toll on chil­dren, experts say. In Wash­ing­ton state alone, nearly 40,000 chil­dren are expected to slip into poverty by 2010; nation­wide, an addi­tional 800,000 kids entered poverty between 2007 and 2008, before the reces­sion really hit.

And how­ever quickly the econ­omy begins its offi­cial recov­ery, the con­se­quences for kids liv­ing in poverty are wide-ranging. Chil­dren who grow up in poor house­holds tend to do worse in school and end up in trou­ble with the law. They’re less likely to go to col­lege and more likely to get preg­nant at a young age. They’re more likely to com­mit crimes or become vic­tims of crimes, and more likely to grow up and live in poverty themselves.

The impact of this really can’t be over­stated,” said Pfin­gst, assis­tant direc­tor of Wash­ing­ton Kid­sCount, an annual sta­tis­ti­cal sur­vey of children’s well-being. “When chil­dren are born into poverty, it affects every sin­gle out­come of their lives.”

A new report from Duke Uni­ver­sity asserts that the reces­sion will undo decades of progress for chil­dren and fam­i­lies. Duke’s Child and Youth Well-Being Index mea­sures a range of cat­e­gories; it esti­mates that all progress made in “fam­ily eco­nomic well-being” since 1975 will be wiped out by this recession.

The Duke index pre­dicts that fam­i­lies will suf­fer from the expected kinds of effects, such as job­less­ness, lower incomes or home­less­ness. But it also sug­gests that chil­dren will pay other prices, in greater obe­sity and health prob­lems, because fam­i­lies will be more likely to rely on low-cost fast food; on social rela­tion­ships and sta­bil­ity, as fam­i­lies are forced to move; and on increased behav­ioral prob­lems and crime, with young peo­ple as both vic­tims and perpetrators.

The impact of the cur­rent reces­sion on chil­dren will be dra­matic,” the Duke report concludes.


This article is from Poverty News Blog: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/EOch/~3/kV5ceTTM6Tk/washington-states-kids-count-says-40000.html




Leave a Reply

Login with Facebook