Child poverty risks

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CHILD POVERTY RISKS IN BELGIUM, WALLONIA AND FLANDERS: ACCOUNTING FOR A WORRYING PERFORMANCE BY

FRANK VANDENBROUCKE* and JULIE VINCK** * professor at the KU Leuven and at the University of Antwerp ** researcher at the Herman Deleeck Centre for Social Policy, University of Antwerp

1. INTRODUCTION

The at-risk-of-poverty rate for children is a ‘lead indicator’ for future social problems. A high rate of child poverty may signal inadequate social protection and/or poorly functioning labour markets, which may be related to lacunae in childcare and in the education system. In turn, child poverty makes success in education policy more difficult to obtain, given the strong link between the social, economic and cultural status of children and their success at school. In other words, child poverty may be cause and effect in a vicious circle of underperforming labour markets and education systems. In the same vein, there may be a vicious interplay between child poverty and failing health care. Belgium is a mediocre performer with regard to child poverty, notwithstanding its long tradition of social security. Moreover, child poverty is increasing. As a first step to understanding why our performance is mediocre and worrisome, we apply an analytical technique that is in essence an accounting device: decomposition. Although this technique is mechanical in all its simplicity, it highlights features of the Belgian welfare edifice which are quite exceptional in a cross-country comparison, but which have not been the subject of much research. One of these features is the skewed distribution of jobs over households. Elsewhere we study this social phenomenon by means of a ‘polarisation analysis’ (Corluy and Vandenbroucke, 2013a, 2013b). In this paper, we signal the same phenomenon with a simple indicator, the ‘relative severity of work poverty’ among households with children. Another feature of our welfare state is the high rate of poverty in households that are very work-poor, i.e. with little or no participation in the labour market. These observations show that Belgium is characterised by a dual polarisation: many children live in households that are very work-poor; simultaneously, financial poverty risks in very work-poor households with children are high. 51


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