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Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2013 5:21 PM
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Subject: UNICEF: U.S. kids worse off than many of their Western counterparts

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UNICEF: U.S. kids worse off than many of their Western counterparts 
<http://portside.org/2013-04-18/unicef-us-kids-worse-many-their-western-counterparts>



By Caitlin Dewey and Max Fisher
April 18, 2013
Washington 
Post<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2013/04/18/unicef-u-s-kids-worse-off-than-many-of-their-western-counterparts/>

The report, which compares kids in 29 Western countries, measures well-being 
across five metrics: material well-being, health and safety, behaviors and 
risks, housing and environment, as well as education. It ranks the United 
States in the bottom third on all five measures of well-being and particularly 
low on education and poverty. The


[http://portside.org/sites/default/files/field/image/unicef-wellbeing-focused.jpg]
, <http://portside.org/> ,





American children are on average worse off than children in Western Europe and 
barely better off than their counterparts in the Baltic states and the former 
Yugoslavia, according to a recent report from United Nation’s Children’s Fund 
(UNICEF)<http://www.unicef-irc.org/publications/pdf/rc11_eng.pdf> on the 
welfare of children in developed countries.



The report, which compares kids in 29 Western countries, measures well-being 
across five metrics: material well-being, health and safety, behaviors and 
risks, housing and environment, as well as education. It ranks the United 
States in the bottom third on all five measures of well-being and particularly 
low on education and poverty. The United States is joined at the bottom by 
“emerging” European economies, while the Scandinavian countries and the 
Netherlands come out on top. The report notes that this latter group of 
countries tends to spend far more per capita on social welfare programs.

The countries with the best reported child well-being tend to invest in strong 
social safety nets. Norway, Iceland and Sweden sink nearly 7 percent of their 
GDP<http://www.oecd.org/els/soc/PF1.2%20Public%20spending%20on%20education%20-%20updated%20181012.pdf>,
 according to an OECD report, into education. Countries such as Estonia, Latvia 
and Lithuania, which until the ‘90s had GDPs per 
capita<http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.PCAP.CD> of less than $5,000, 
have been able to put less money into such services. Though U.S. GDP per capita 
was more than $48,000 in 2012, that money is not spread evenly cross the 
unusually large U.S. population.

As we noted 
earlier<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2013/04/15/map-how-35-countries-compare-on-child-poverty-the-u-s-is-ranked-34th/>,
 one of the report’s more alarming findings for the United States is the degree 
to which income inequality has increased the population of children who grow up 
in relative poverty, meaning that America’s famously abundant wealth does not 
equally benefit all children. Economists rate the U.S. economy as one of the 
most unequal in the Western world.

The low U.S. rating, then, does not mean that all American children are worse 
educated, less healthy and less well-off than all children in, for example, 
Greece and Slovakia. After all, many American kids are doing great. But the 
report, just as worryingly, means that significant numbers of American children 
are so much worse off than the average Greek or Slovakian child as to bring the 
overall U.S. average beneath those other, relatively less wealthy and developed 
countries.

Here’s a chart showing the rankings, overall and across the five key metrics, 
for all 29 countries: 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/files/2013/04/uncief-char...<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/files/2013/04/uncief-chart.jpg>

Still, the United States did do well on some comparative metrics. American kids 
get more exercise than almost any others studied in the report, but they’re 
still, by far, the most overweight. (Chalk that up to American calorie 
consumption<http://www.fao.org/fileadmin/templates/ess/documents/food_security_statistics/FoodConsumptionNutrients_en.xls>,
 which is also one of the world’s highest.) American kids also are the least 
likely to drink alcohol — a finding that matches long-standing alcohol 
consumption 
patterns<http://www.who.int/substance_abuse/publications/global_alcohol_report/profiles/usa.pdf>
 of American adults. According to the World Health Organization, Americans ages 
15 and up have consumed far less alcohol than their counterparts abroad for 
decades.

Meanwhile, Canadian children smoke the most marijuana, with more than one in 
four reporting they’d lit up in the past year — a period when Canada continued 
its national debate on the country’s cannabis laws.

Here’s something that might surprise you: kids in high-achieving Finland attend 
preschool less than anyone else, which seems to buck research linking preschool 
to later educational and economic success. But, as the report explains, that 
statistic is somewhat misleading: preschool begins later in Finland than it 
does elsewhere, which throws off the numbers.

Finally, there are some interesting, if unpleasant, hints on how Europe’s 
recent economic crises could impact youth there. In Spain, Italy and Ireland, 
more than 10 percent of children ages 15 to 19 are not enrolled in education, 
employment or training — a frightening figure that might reflect post-recession 
unemployment numbers and which could, per UNICEF, augur “mental health 
problems, drug abuse, involvement in crime, and long-term unemployment and 
welfare dependence” in the future.

Some of those effects could be playing out in Spain already. More than half of 
the surveyed Spanish children said they’d been in a physical fight within the 
past year, a huge 15 percent jump from UNICEF’s 2001 survey. Greece reported a 
similar jump in the past decade. Both countries have suffered in the European 
financial crisis.

As the report notes, these types of statistics are interesting less as a 
snapshot of the present than a predictor of the future.

“At the heart of the case to be made is the fact that childhood is … a time in 
which future patterns and pathways of health and well-being are being laid down 
and in which disruption can have lifelong consequences,” the report concludes. 
“Protecting the years of childhood is therefore essential both for the 
well-being of those who are children today and for the well-being of the 
societies of tomorrow.”

© The Washington Post Company




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