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Four million Argentine children live in poverty conditions, according to Unicef

Almost four million children in Argentina are poor and 8.5% live in extreme poverty, according to a report from UNICEF which measures multidimensional poverty which considers 28 indicators such as nutrition, access to healthcare, exposure to violence, among other more traditional references.

The original report is from 2015 but has been updated and gives an idea of extreme poverty environment for children in Argentina: most are born to families with four to five children, minimum education parents and who mostly work in the black economy.However children in the north of Argentina are six times more exposed to lack of basic food, health and education care that those in Buenos Aires City. Girls from families headed by women are even more dispossessed.

“These conditions are not chosen by children, they are simply born with them”, reports Sebastian Waisgrais who monitors and assesses Unicef programs. In those households where parents only have primary schooling, children are ten times more exposed to poverty conditions than those from households with parents that have attended university.

“Investing in education is a way of breaking that virtuous poverty circle”, says Florence Bauer Unicef representative in Argentina. She also insisted in the need to implement public policies that help combat informality in the work market, which is estimated at 40% in Argentina, and directly linked to child poverty.

Income inequality factor means the children at the base of the income pyramid are 13 times more exposed to suffer hardships than those in the cusp. But according to Unicef the income factor is a traditional tool to measure poverty, which means family have or don’t have the capacity to fulfill basic food needs and others such as clothing and transport. But Unicef also points out that one of five children which are considered not to be or belong to poor households, because of income, certainly are lacking other indicators.

Read full article in the MercoPress click here.

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