The Child Action Poverty GroupThursday 29 July 2010, 12:22PM
Media release from the Child Action Poverty Group
A new report from Child
Poverty Action Group (CPAG) warns that the government's single
minded focus on parents' work status sidelines the needs of
children.
Economics spokesperson Claire Dale says Working for Families,
introduced in 2004, was supposed to increase employment among sole
parent families.
"The results have been very underwhelming, and the policy is
misguided. In the recession sole parents have been losing
jobs at a very high rate, and the number of sole parents on a
benefit is now back where it was before the 2004 reforms.
"Children in these families are vulnerable to sudden and severe
falls in income. A big factor in obtaining and keeping work is the
availability of jobs, but children's' needs remain the same whether
jobs are there or not," she said. CPAG also warns that the changes
proposed under the government's Future Focus legislation which
insist on 15 hours paid employment will worsen child poverty if
parents are unable to find jobs.
The report shows parents face great difficulty trying to juggle
raising their children, working, and dealing with the benefit
system. Often it is not possible or sensible for sole parents to be
in paid work and the government should respect the work they are
already doing: "Raising children requires support on all fronts,
not just getting parents into work."
"New Zealand's children have borne the brunt of changes in
welfare, education, and the labour market in the last 20 years. If
we leave their welfare to a minimal safety net we gamble with
their futures.. Children's needs must be at the centre of policy
decisions - not a by product of an increasingly precarious and
volatile labour market."