Ok, neither leader has been speaking about poverty.
But they should.
Specifically about the impact of poverty on Australian children.
There’s some pretty amazing work being done in this space by the Valuing Children initiative, which runs the End Child Poverty campaign.
They’re campaigning both sides of politics for a legislated end to child poverty.
That doesn’t mean poverty would end with an Act of Parliament, but it would set targets and – for the first time – actually define and measure poverty in Australia.
It would be much easier to implement meaningful policies with accurate, local, up-to-date data.
How would it work?
Reporting to Parliament every year, governments are held accountable to targets, while providing transparency to the community about the extent of child poverty. When considering initiatives in the Budget, Governments of all levels would then be required to give greater focus to the wellbeing of children in Australia.
Here’s what we know about child poverty:
- More than 820,000 Australian children are living in poverty and that this has increased by over 100,000 since the pandemic. The authors state poverty is expected to be even higher given increased essential living costs since 2022 when the data was collected.
- The report confirms that single parent families face more than 3 times the poverty rate of couple families (more than 1 in 3, compared with less than 1 in 10)
- Children who experience poverty and housing stress are significantly more likely to suffer nervousness or feel unhappy with their lives for up to ten years after leaving home. “Poverty scars people. It gets under the skin. Children growing up in poverty often carry these scars with them for life.”
The Australia Institute released a discussion paper – Ending Child Poverty in Australia – which included some pretty conclusive polling that found Australians want genuine action to end poverty.
- 83% of those polled want the government to regularly measure and report poverty rates in Australia.
- More than 4 in 5 (81%) agree that income support payments should be set at a rate that does not cause any child to live in poverty.
- Australians are highly concerned about the effects of poverty on children’s education and employment (85%) and their health and lifespan (83%).