Child poverty: What drives it and what it means for children
Report
New flagship report looks at the situation of children living in poverty in countries around the world shining a light on the drivers and its consequneces.
This new, flagship report looks at the situation of children living in poverty in countries around the world, shining a light on the drivers of child poverty and exploring why it persists, even in some of the wealthiest places. We also hear from children in poverty themselves: our best guides to understanding the urgency of this challenge.
This report is part of a concerted effort by Save the Children, together with partners in the Global Coalition to End Child Poverty, to ensure that the poorest children across the world receive the attention that they deserve. While there are great differences between societies, it is clear that fundamental similarities exist in the drivers and experiences of child poverty. The same is true of the essential solutions.
Dowload the report: [En] [Sp] [Fr] [Ar] ǀ Read the executive summary
Further resources: Global child poverty poster ǀ Global Webinar recording
About this Report
© 2016 Save the Children UK
Child Poverty Indicators to Measure Progress on the SDGs
BRIEF
This policy brief provides recommendations to measure child poverty as part of the post-2015 development agenda.
BRIEF
The Coalition of Partners Working to End Child Poverty has developed a policy brief that assesses how child poverty can be included as part of the new monitoring framework of the SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals). The brief provides specific recommendations to support United Nations member states in framing their new poverty reduction indicators and ensure children are included and not let behind.
1. The current draft Post-2015 development goals and targets that include child poverty should include specific child poverty indicators
2. Efforts to monitor progress towards new SDG Targets 1.1 and 1.2 should include the following monetary and multidimensional poverty indicators:
-Percentage of population below $1.90 per day, disaggregated by age to capture the child poverty rate
-Proportion of children (0-17) below the national poverty line
-Proportion of children (0-17) living in multidimensional poverty
3. Child poverty targets should be reinforced with a new focus on equity to ensure the poorest and most disadvantaged children are reached and no child is left behind:
-All child-level indicators used in the SDGs should be disaggregated by income or wealth quintiles, ‘monetary’ and ‘multidimensional’ poverty status and other forms of inequality
4. Data collection for the most vulnerable children – who are often omitted from or bypassed in surveys and programmes – must be improved1. The current draft Post-2015 development goals and targets that include child poverty should include specific child poverty indicators