Press Release:
NEW YORK, 28 June 2016 – Based on current trends, 69
million children under five will die from mostly preventable causes, 167
million children will live in poverty, and 750 million women will have been
married as children by 2030, the target date for the Sustainable Development
Goals – unless
the world focuses more on the plight of
its most disadvantaged children, according to a UNICEF report released today.
The State
of the World’s Children, UNICEF’s annual flagship report, paints a
stark picture of what is in store for the world’s poorest children if
governments, donors, businesses and international organizations do not
accelerate efforts to address their needs.
“Denying hundreds of
millions of children a fair chance in life does more than threaten their
futures – by fueling intergenerational cycles of disadvantage, it imperils the
future of their societies,” said UNICEF Executive Director Anthony
Lake. “We have a choice: Invest in these children now or allow our world
to become still more unequal and divided.”
The report notes that
significant progress has been made in saving children’s lives, getting children
into school and lifting people out of poverty. Global under-five mortality
rates have been more than halved since 1990, boys and girls attend primary school
in equal numbers in 129 countries, and the number of people living in extreme
poverty worldwide is almost half what it was in the 1990s.
But this progress has been
neither even nor fair, the report says. The poorest children are twice as
likely to die before their fifth birthday and to be chronically malnourished
than the richest. Across much of South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, children
born to mothers with no education are almost 3 times more likely to die before
they are 5 than those born to mothers with a secondary education. And girls
from the poorest households are twice as likely to marry as children than girls
from the wealthiest households.
Nowhere is the outlook
grimmer than in sub-Saharan Africa, where at least 247 million children
– or 2 in 3 – live in multidimensional poverty, deprived of what they need to
survive and develop, and where nearly 60 per cent of 20- to
24-year-olds from the poorest fifth of the population have had less than four
years of schooling. At current trends, the report projects, by 2030,
sub-Saharan Africa will account for:
· Nearly half of the 69 million children who
will die before their fifth birthday from mostly preventable causes;
· More than half of the 60 million children of primary
school age who will still be out of school; and
· 9 out of 10 children living in extreme poverty.
Although education plays a unique role in levelling
the playing field for children, the number of children who do not attend school
has increased since 2011, and a significant proportion of those who do go to
school are not learning. About 124 million children today do not go to primary-
and lower-secondary school, and almost 2 in 5 who do finish primary school have
not learned how to read, write or do simple arithmetic.
The report points to
evidence that investing in the most vulnerable children can yield immediate and
long-term benefits. Cash transfers, for example, have been shown to help
children stay in school longer and advance to higher levels of education. On
average, each additional year of education a child receives increases his or
her adult earnings by about 10 per cent. And for each additional year of
schooling completed, on average, by young adults in a country, that country’s
poverty rates fall by 9 per cent.
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