Logo for M Libraries Publishing

Want to create or adapt books like this? Learn more about how Pressbooks supports open publishing practices.

2.4 The Consequences of Poverty

Learning objectives.

  • Describe the family and housing problems associated with poverty.
  • Explain how poverty affects health and educational attainment.

Regardless of its causes, poverty has devastating consequences for the people who live in it. Much research conducted and/or analyzed by scholars, government agencies, and nonprofit organizations has documented the effects of poverty (and near poverty) on the lives of the poor (Lindsey, 2009; Moore, et. al., 2009; Ratcliffe & McKernan, 2010; Sanders, 2011). Many of these studies focus on childhood poverty, and these studies make it very clear that childhood poverty has lifelong consequences. In general, poor children are more likely to be poor as adults, more likely to drop out of high school, more likely to become a teenaged parent, and more likely to have employment problems. Although only 1 percent of children who are never poor end up being poor as young adults, 32 percent of poor children become poor as young adults (Ratcliffe & McKernan, 2010).

Poverty:

Poor children are more likely to have inadequate nutrition and to experience health, behavioral, and cognitive problems.

Kelly Short – Poverty: “Damaged Child,” Oklahoma City, OK, USA, 1936. (Colorized). – CC BY-SA 2.0.

A recent study used government data to follow children born between 1968 and 1975 until they were ages 30 to 37 (Duncan & Magnuson, 2011). The researchers compared individuals who lived in poverty in early childhood to those whose families had incomes at least twice the poverty line in early childhood. Compared to the latter group, adults who were poor in early childhood

  • had completed two fewer years of schooling on the average;
  • had incomes that were less than half of those earned by adults who had wealthier childhoods;
  • received $826 more annually in food stamps on the average;
  • were almost three times more likely to report being in poor health;
  • were twice as likely to have been arrested (males only); and
  • were five times as likely to have borne a child (females only).

We discuss some of the major specific consequences of poverty here and will return to them in later chapters.

Family Problems

The poor are at greater risk for family problems, including divorce and domestic violence. As Chapter 9 “Sexual Behavior” explains, a major reason for many of the problems families experience is stress. Even in families that are not poor, running a household can cause stress, children can cause stress, and paying the bills can cause stress. Families that are poor have more stress because of their poverty, and the ordinary stresses of family life become even more intense in poor families. The various kinds of family problems thus happen more commonly in poor families than in wealthier families. Compounding this situation, when these problems occur, poor families have fewer resources than wealthier families to deal with these problems.

Children and Our Future

Getting under Children’s Skin: The Biological Effects of Childhood Poverty

As the text discusses, childhood poverty often has lifelong consequences. Poor children are more likely to be poor when they become adults, and they are at greater risk for antisocial behavior when young, and for unemployment, criminal behavior, and other problems when they reach adolescence and young adulthood.

According to growing evidence, one reason poverty has these consequences is that it has certain neural effects on poor children that impair their cognitive abilities and thus their behavior and learning potential. As Greg J. Duncan and Katherine Magnuson (Duncan & Magnuson, 2011, p. 23) observe, “Emerging research in neuroscience and developmental psychology suggests that poverty early in a child’s life may be particularly harmful because the astonishingly rapid development of young children’s brains leaves them sensitive (and vulnerable) to environmental conditions.”

In short, poverty can change the way the brain develops in young children. The major reason for this effect is stress. Children growing up in poverty experience multiple stressful events: neighborhood crime and drug use; divorce, parental conflict, and other family problems, including abuse and neglect by their parents; parental financial problems and unemployment; physical and mental health problems of one or more family members; and so forth. Their great levels of stress in turn affect their bodies in certain harmful ways. As two poverty scholars note, “It’s not just that poverty-induced stress is mentally taxing. If it’s experienced early enough in childhood, it can in fact get ‘under the skin’ and change the way in which the body copes with the environment and the way in which the brain develops. These deep, enduring, and sometimes irreversible physiological changes are the very human price of running a high-poverty society” (Grusky & Wimer, 2011, p. 2).

One way poverty gets “under children’s skin” is as follows (Evans, et. al., 2011). Poor children’s high levels of stress produce unusually high levels of stress hormones such as cortisol and higher levels of blood pressure. Because these high levels impair their neural development, their memory and language development skills suffer. This result in turn affects their behavior and learning potential. For other physiological reasons, high levels of stress also affect the immune system, so that poor children are more likely to develop various illnesses during childhood and to have high blood pressure and other health problems when they grow older, and cause other biological changes that make poor children more likely to end up being obese and to have drug and alcohol problems.

The policy implications of the scientific research on childhood poverty are clear. As public health scholar Jack P. Shonkoff (Shonkoff, 2011) explains, “Viewing this scientific evidence within a biodevelopmental framework points to the particular importance of addressing the needs of our most disadvantaged children at the earliest ages.” Duncan and Magnuson (Duncan & Magnuson, 2011) agree that “greater policy attention should be given to remediating situations involving deep and persistent poverty occurring early in childhood.” To reduce poverty’s harmful physiological effects on children, Skonkoff advocates efforts to promote strong, stable relationships among all members of poor families; to improve the quality of the home and neighborhood physical environments in which poor children grow; and to improve the nutrition of poor children. Duncan and Magnuson call for more generous income transfers to poor families with young children and note that many European democracies provide many kinds of support to such families. The recent scientific evidence on early childhood poverty underscores the importance of doing everything possible to reduce the harmful effects of poverty during the first few years of life.

Health, Illness, and Medical Care

The poor are also more likely to have many kinds of health problems, including infant mortality, earlier adulthood mortality, and mental illness, and they are also more likely to receive inadequate medical care. Poor children are more likely to have inadequate nutrition and, partly for this reason, to suffer health, behavioral, and cognitive problems. These problems in turn impair their ability to do well in school and land stable employment as adults, helping to ensure that poverty will persist across generations. Many poor people are uninsured or underinsured, at least until the US health-care reform legislation of 2010 takes full effect a few years from now, and many have to visit health clinics that are overcrowded and understaffed.

As Chapter 12 “Work and the Economy” discusses, it is unclear how much of poor people’s worse health stems from their lack of money and lack of good health care versus their own behavior such as smoking and eating unhealthy diets. Regardless of the exact reasons, however, the fact remains that poor health is a major consequence of poverty. According to recent research, this fact means that poverty is responsible for almost 150,000 deaths annually, a figure about equal to the number of deaths from lung cancer (Bakalar, 2011).

Poor children typically go to rundown schools with inadequate facilities where they receive inadequate schooling. They are much less likely than wealthier children to graduate from high school or to go to college. Their lack of education in turn restricts them and their own children to poverty, once again helping to ensure a vicious cycle of continuing poverty across generations. As Chapter 10 “The Changing Family” explains, scholars debate whether the poor school performance of poor children stems more from the inadequacy of their schools and schooling versus their own poverty. Regardless of exactly why poor children are more likely to do poorly in school and to have low educational attainment, these educational problems are another major consequence of poverty.

Housing and Homelessness

The poor are, not surprisingly, more likely to be homeless than the nonpoor but also more likely to live in dilapidated housing and unable to buy their own homes. Many poor families spend more than half their income on rent, and they tend to live in poor neighborhoods that lack job opportunities, good schools, and other features of modern life that wealthier people take for granted. The lack of adequate housing for the poor remains a major national problem. Even worse is outright homelessness. An estimated 1.6 million people, including more than 300,000 children, are homeless at least part of the year (Lee, et. al., 2010).

Crime and Victimization

As Chapter 7 “Alcohol and Other Drugs” discusses, poor (and near poor) people account for the bulk of our street crime (homicide, robbery, burglary, etc.), and they also account for the bulk of victims of street crime. That chapter will outline several reasons for this dual connection between poverty and street crime, but they include the deep frustration and stress of living in poverty and the fact that many poor people live in high-crime neighborhoods. In such neighborhoods, children are more likely to grow up under the influence of older peers who are already in gangs or otherwise committing crime, and people of any age are more likely to become crime victims. Moreover, because poor and near-poor people are more likely to commit street crime, they also comprise most of the people arrested for street crimes, convicted of street crime, and imprisoned for street crime. Most of the more than 2 million people now in the nation’s prisons and jails come from poor or near-poor backgrounds. Criminal behavior and criminal victimization, then, are other major consequences of poverty.

Lessons from Other Societies

Poverty and Poverty Policy in Other Western Democracies

To compare international poverty rates, scholars commonly use a measure of the percentage of households in a nation that receive less than half of the nation’s median household income after taxes and cash transfers from the government. In data from the late 2000s, 17.3 percent of US households lived in poverty as defined by this measure. By comparison, other Western democracies had the rates depicted in the figure that follows. The average poverty rate of the nations in the figure excluding the United States is 9.5 percent. The US rate is thus almost twice as high as the average for all the other democracies.

A graph of the Percentage of People Living in Poverty, from lowest to highest, it is: Denmark, Iceland, Netherlands, France, Norway, Finland, Sweden, Switzerland, Germany, Belgium, The average (excluding the US), Ireland, United Kingdom, Canada, Italy, Greece, Portugal, Spain, and at the highest spot, the United States.

This graph illustrates the poverty rates in western democracies (i.e., the percentage of persons living with less than half of the median household income) as of the late 2000s

Source: Data from Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (2011). Society at a glance 2011: OECD social indicators. Retrieved July 23, 2011, from http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/soc_glance-2011-en/06/02/index.html;jsessionid=erdqhbpb203ea.epsilon?contentType=&itemId=/content/chapter/soc_glance-2011-17-en&containerItemId=/content/se .

Why is there so much more poverty in the United States than in its Western counterparts? Several differences between the United States and the other nations stand out (Brady, 2009; Russell, 2011). First, other Western nations have higher minimum wages and stronger labor unions than the United States has, and these lead to incomes that help push people above poverty. Second, these other nations spend a much greater proportion of their gross domestic product on social expenditures (income support and social services such as child-care subsidies and housing allowances) than does the United States. As sociologist John Iceland (Iceland, 2006) notes, “Such countries often invest heavily in both universal benefits, such as maternity leave, child care, and medical care, and in promoting work among [poor] families…The United States, in comparison with other advanced nations, lacks national health insurance, provides less publicly supported housing, and spends less on job training and job creation.” Block and colleagues agree: “These other countries all take a more comprehensive government approach to combating poverty, and they assume that it is caused by economic and structural factors rather than bad behavior” (Block et, al., 2006).

The experience of the United Kingdom provides a striking contrast between the effectiveness of the expansive approach used in other wealthy democracies and the inadequacy of the American approach. In 1994, about 30 percent of British children lived in poverty; by 2009, that figure had fallen by more than half to 12 percent. Meanwhile, the US 2009 child poverty rate, was almost 21 percent.

Britain used three strategies to reduce its child poverty rate and to help poor children and their families in other ways. First, it induced more poor parents to work through a series of new measures, including a national minimum wage higher than its US counterpart and various tax savings for low-income workers. Because of these measures, the percentage of single parents who worked rose from 45 percent in 1997 to 57 percent in 2008. Second, Britain increased child welfare benefits regardless of whether a parent worked. Third, it increased paid maternity leave from four months to nine months, implemented two weeks of paid paternity leave, established universal preschool (which both helps children’s cognitive abilities and makes it easier for parents to afford to work), increased child-care aid, and made it possible for parents of young children to adjust their working hours to their parental responsibilities (Waldfogel, 2010). While the British child poverty rate fell dramatically because of these strategies, the US child poverty rate stagnated.

In short, the United States has so much more poverty than other democracies in part because it spends so much less than they do on helping the poor. The United States certainly has the wealth to follow their example, but it has chosen not to do so, and a high poverty rate is the unfortunate result. As the Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman (2006, p. A25) summarizes this lesson, “Government truly can be a force for good. Decades of propaganda have conditioned many Americans to assume that government is always incompetent…But the [British experience has] shown that a government that seriously tries to reduce poverty can achieve a lot.”

Key Takeaways

  • Poor people are more likely to have several kinds of family problems, including divorce and family conflict.
  • Poor people are more likely to have several kinds of health problems.
  • Children growing up in poverty are less likely to graduate high school or go to college, and they are more likely to commit street crime.

For Your Review

  • Write a brief essay that summarizes the consequences of poverty.
  • Why do you think poor children are more likely to develop health problems?

Bakalar, N. (2011, July 4). Researchers link deaths to social ills. New York Times , p. D5.

Block, F., Korteweg, A. C., & Woodward, K. (2006). The compassion gap in American poverty policy. Contexts, 5 (2), 14–20.

Brady, D. (2009). Rich democracies, poor people: How politics explain poverty . New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Duncan, G. J., & Magnuson, K. (2011, winter). The long reach of early childhood poverty. Pathways: A Magazine on Poverty, Inequality, and Social Policy , 22–27.

Evans, G. W., Brooks-Gunn, J., & Klebanov, P. K. (2011, winter). Stressing out the poor: Chronic physiological stress and the income-achievement gap. Pathways: A Magazine on Poverty, Inequality, and Social Policy , 16–21.

Grusky, D., & Wimer, C.(Eds.). (2011, winter). Editors’ note. Pathways: A Magazine on Poverty, Inequality, and Social Policy , 2.

Iceland, J. (2006). Poverty in America: A handbook . Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

Krugman, P. (Krugman, 2006). Helping the poor, the British way. New York Times , p. A25.

Lee, B., Tyler, K. A., & Wright, J. D. ( 2010). The new homelessness revisited. Annual Review of Sociology, 36 , 501–521.

Lindsey, D. (2009). Child poverty and inequality: Securing a better future for America’s children . New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Moore, K. A., Redd, Z., Burkhauser, M., Mbawa, K., & Collins, A. (2009). Children in poverty: Trends, consequences, and policy options . Washington, DC: Child Trends. Retrieved from http://www.childtrends.org/Files//Child_Trends-2009_04_07_RB_ChildreninPoverty.pdf .

Ratcliffe, C., & McKernan, S.-M. (2010). Childhood poverty persistence: Facts and consequences . Washington, DC: Urban Institute Press.

Russell, J. W. ( 2011). Double standard: Social policy in Europe and the United States (2nd ed.). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

Sanders, L. (2011). Neuroscience exposes pernicious effects of poverty. Science News, 179 (3), 32.

Shonkoff, J. P. (2011, winter). Building a foundation for prosperity on the science of early childhood development. Pathways: A Magazine on Poverty, Inequality, and Social Policy , 10–14.

Waldfogel, J. (2010). Britain’s war on poverty . New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.

Social Problems Copyright © 2015 by University of Minnesota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License , except where otherwise noted.

Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.

To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to  upgrade your browser .

Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link.

  • We're Hiring!
  • Help Center

paper cover thumbnail

Effects of poverty on education

Profile image of Ronald Buck

2014, International Journal of Human Sciences

Related Papers

effects of poverty essay pdf

Journal of Policy Analysis and Management

Jasmin Valdez

Eğitimde Nitel Araştırmalar Dergisi

Sergender SEZER

Teacher's College Record

David C . Berliner

This analysis is about the role of poverty in school reform. Data from a number of sources are used to make five points. First, that poverty in the US is greater and of longer duration than in other rich nations. Second, that poverty, particularly among urban minorities, is associated with academic performance that is well below international means on a number of different international assessments. Scores of poor students are also considerably below the scores achieved by white middle class American students. Third, that poverty restricts the expression of genetic talent at the lower end of the socioeconomic scale. Among the lowest social classes environmental factors, particularly family and neighborhood influences, not genetics, is strongly associated with academic performance. Among middle class students it is genetic factors, not family and neighborhood factors, that most influences academic performance. Fourth, compared to middle class children, severe medical problems affect impoverished youth. This limits their school achievement as well as their life chances. Data on the negative effect of impoverished neighborhoods on the youth who reside there is also presented. Fifth, and of greatest interest, is that small reductions in family poverty lead to increases in positive school behavior and better academic performance. It is argued that poverty places severe limits on what can be accomplished through school reform efforts, particularly those associated with the federal No Child Left Behind law. The data presented in this study suggest that the most powerful policy for improving our nations' school achievement is a reduction in family and youth poverty.

Academic Journals. e-mail: [email protected]; e-mail: [email protected]; Web site: http://academicjournals.org/ERR2

Resisting Educational Inequality

Karen Laing

Lyndon Abrams

Emily Hannum

RELATED PAPERS

Indah Lestari Nababan

Annals of Neurology

Paula Moreira

Revista de Derecho Económico

Maira Aguirre

Advances in Bioscience and Biotechnology

Oscar Ruiz Barrera

Yoshihiko Muto

Dr. Pankaj M Madhani

Asian Academy of Management Journal

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Norizan Mat Saad

Mauricio Goldfarb

Desenvolvimento e Meio Ambiente

Rodolfo José Angulo

Primeiros Estudos

Pedro Borda

Physics Letters B

Cristian Pisano

Devotion Journal of Community Service

FERIYANSYAH FERIYANSYAH

Hematology - Science and Practice

amit choudhury

TUBERCULOSIS (TBC)

Adisty Manuahe , Mariani Rumais

Actualidades Investigativas en Educación

Ana Lucia Poma Gallegos

ICES Journal of Marine Science

Hans Gerritsen

Tibor Szénási

Jurnal Ilmiah ILKOMINFO - Ilmu Komputer & Informatika

Giri Purnama

Haydee Rincon

Avances en Energías Renovables y Medio Ambiente

virgilio núñez

Bernhard Fassl

Cyril Brochon

Lecture Notes in Computer Science

René Chalon

RELATED TOPICS

  •   We're Hiring!
  •   Help Center
  • Find new research papers in:
  • Health Sciences
  • Earth Sciences
  • Cognitive Science
  • Mathematics
  • Computer Science
  • Academia ©2024

IMAGES

  1. Poverty Essay

    effects of poverty essay pdf

  2. ⇉Cause and effect:poverty Essay Example

    effects of poverty essay pdf

  3. effects.docx

    effects of poverty essay pdf

  4. (PDF) The Effects of Poverty on Children

    effects of poverty essay pdf

  5. Definition of Poverty and Types of Poverty Argumentative Essay on

    effects of poverty essay pdf

  6. (PDF) Effect of Poverty on Mental Health

    effects of poverty essay pdf

VIDEO

  1. Poverty Essay || Essay on Poverty || Essay Writing || Poverty

  2. GCSE Guided Revision: Live Marking 'ACC' Effects on Poverty Essay

  3. Poverty & Afghanistan Report

  4. (Uncut) Population Explosion in Pakistan

  5. English Essay writing|Class 8|Effects of poverty on Human Life|Essay on Poverty

  6. Uneducated Population (Pakistan)

COMMENTS

  1. PDF Poverty: Facts, Causes and Consequences

    Hilary Hoynes University of California, Davis. April 2012. In 2010, more than 1 in 5 children lived in poverty and 15.1 percent of all persons were poor. Government spending on anti-poverty programs includes $30 b. on TANF, $51 b. on the EITC, and $50 b. on Food Stamps. In this talk, I discuss what we know about the causes of poverty and its ...

  2. 2.4 The Consequences of Poverty

    Regardless of its causes, poverty has devastating consequences for the people who live in it. Much research conducted and/or analyzed by scholars, government agencies, and nonprofit organizations has documented the effects of poverty (and near poverty) on the lives of the poor (Lindsey, 2009; Moore, et. al., 2009; Ratcliffe & McKernan, 2010; Sanders, 2011).

  3. PDF Essays on Poverty and Wellbeing

    Essays on Poverty and Wellbeing Sian E.M. O'Hare Work in progress - not for citation without the author's permission i ... extreme poverty has a significant negative effect on wellbeing (Blanchflower, Oswald 2004). This thesis began as an exploration of the nature and causes of poverty in the UK, and how

  4. Effects of poverty, hunger and homelessness on children and youth

    Poverty is associated with substandard housing, hunger, homelessness, inadequate childcare, unsafe neighborhoods, and under-resourced schools. In addition, low-income children are at greater risk than higher-income children for a range of cognitive, emotional, and health-related problems, including detrimental effects on executive functioning ...

  5. (PDF) On world poverty: Its causes and effects

    The $2/day poverty measure is al so elastic with respect to changes in the birth rate (BR) ( 0$2,BR = 1.16). A 1 percent increase in birth rate results in a 1.16 percent increase in the ...

  6. PDF Ending Global Poverty: Why Money Isn't Enough

    share of the world's population living below the global extreme poverty line ($1.90 in. consumption per day) has plunged dramatically in recent decades, from. 42 percent in 1981 to 11 percent in 2013 (PovcalNet 2018). This. remarkable decline has buoyed hopes of continued reductions and created. expectations about where future reductions will ...

  7. PDF Ending Poverty by 2030: Undp'S Perspective and Role

    State of Global Poverty. At the heart of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is a commitment "to eradicate poverty everywhere, in all its forms and dimensions by 2030". With the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, world leaders moved past poverty reduction and set out to achieve sustainable development that leaves no one behind.

  8. PDF Reconsidering Culture and Poverty

    Students of poverty should be concerned with culture for both scholarly and policy reasons. Scholarly motivations Poverty scholarship should be concerned with culture for at least three rea-sons. The first is to understand better why people respond to poverty the way they do—both how they cope with it and how they escape it.

  9. PDF Institute for Research on Poverty

    This paper focuses on the economic and social costs of poverty. We attempt to quantify the. overall costs to U.S. society of having children grow up in poverty—both in the form of lost economic productivity and earnings as adults, and also as additional costs associated with higher crime and poorer.

  10. Full article: Defining the characteristics of poverty and their

    The individual- and context-specific nature of poverty also influences the poverty analysis process. It helps poverty analysts to capture variations of the nature and severity of poverty according to age and gender as well as social, cultural, economic, political, environmental and spatial contexts. 3.4.

  11. PDF The Effects of Poverty on Academic Achievement Kendra McKenzie ...

    the effects of poverty so that we can implement these strategies and decrease the likelihood of lower academic achievement. Common Challenges Viewed in the Classroom There are many challenges faced by children raised in poverty. Some challenges are long-term obstacles such as chronic stressors and changes in brain structure that effect emotion and

  12. PDF Poverty in Education

    There are many stressors poverty. creates such as economic strain, family conflict, frequent moves, transitions, exposure to. discrimination, and other traumatic events that can have an adverse effect on students' behavior. The poverty-related stress students experience can lead to truancy and deviant. behavior.

  13. (PDF) The Effects of Poverty on Children

    55. The Effects of Poverty. on Children. Jeanne Brooks-Gunn. Greg J. Duncan. Abstract. Although hundreds of studies have documented the association between family. poverty and children's health ...

  14. PDF Economic growth: the impact on poverty reduction, inequality, human

    On average, a one per cent increase in per capita income reduced poverty by 1.7 per cent (see Figure 1).2. Among these 14 countries, the reduction in poverty was particularly spectacular in Vietnam, where poverty fell by 7.8 per cent a year between 1993 and 2002, halving the poverty rate from 58 per cent to 29 per cent.

  15. (PDF) Poverty: A Literature Review of the Concept ...

    Research Institute of Sri Lanka, Lunuwila, 61150, Sri Lanka. Email: [email protected]. Abstract. In spite of the fact that there is some lucidity within the field of poverty with respect to the ...

  16. PDF Essays on Poverty Dynamics in South Africa P Cheteni orcid.org/0000

    these poverty estimates have helped countries in targeting poverty, many critics have come along in the poverty discourse. The major problem being that poverty estimates are problematic, hence, making it hard for developing countries to fight poverty. The first article in this thesis focuses on the effects of culture on poverty reduction

  17. PDF Effects of Poverty on Education in India

    2. To highlight about impact of poverty on children in India. 3. To understand how education is effected by poverty. 4. To find out some cause of poverty in India. 5. To determine India‟s education is effected by poverty. 6. To highlight the education is the way out of poverty. 7. To suggest some point-of-view for solution the poverty. II ...

  18. (PDF) Effects of poverty on education

    Emily Hannum. Volume: 11 Issue: 2 Year: 2014 Effects of poverty on education Ronald Buck1 Joe Deutsch 2 Abstract This article examines the effects of poverty on education. Many different aspects contribute to a community becoming impoverished such as deindustrialization, high unemployment rates, untreated mental health, and violent crimes.

  19. (PDF) Poverty in Africa: Causes, Consequences, and ...

    Poverty in Africa: Causes, Conseque nces, and. Potential Solutions. Akello Barke. Jean Lorougnon Guede University. Email: [email protected]. Abstract. Africa, the world's second-largest continent ...

  20. Poverty and inequality in South Africa: critical reflections

    This is according to the upper-bound poverty line of R992 per person per month, in 2015 prices (Statistics South Africa, 2017 ). Worryingly, poverty is highest among young people, with 63.7% of children under 17 years and 58.6% of 18-24 year-olds living in poverty, compared to 40.4% of 45-54 year-olds.

  21. (PDF) Poverty and Education

    PPT1. 1. Poverty among children is much higher among the Bangladeshi, Pakistani, Black and Chinese ethnic groups than it is among the Indian or. White ethnic groups, and has increased since the ...

  22. (PDF) Poverty in South Africa

    Poverty in South African households has been reported [17, 79], especially in settings with poor infrastructure like rural and informal settlements [27,31]. Worth noting, is that South Africa has ...