新西兰天维网社区

 找回密码
登录  注册
搜索
热搜: 移民 留学
查看: 465|回复: 1
打印 上一主题 下一主题

[热点] The myth of how families in poverty spend their money [复制链接]

Rank: 18Rank: 18Rank: 18Rank: 18Rank: 18

升级  22.96%

UID
122872
热情
26387
人气
28461
主题
946
帖子
33226
精华
4
积分
44592
阅读权限
30
注册时间
2007-7-19
跳转到指定楼层
楼主
发表于 2016-1-2 23:46:25 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览 微信分享
本帖最后由 爱国爱港 于 2016-1-3 00:47 编辑

http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/comment/75556427/The-myth-of-how-families-in-poverty-spend-their-money

Families in poverty tend to spend any extra money on their children's living costs, not alcohol or cigarettes, research shows.
CHARLOTTE CURD/FAIRFAX NZ

OPINION: It's not true that if giving cash to the poor means they will just spend it on "booze and ciggies", writes Jess Berentson-Shaw.

"And they say to budget your money, save your money – how can you do that when they don't give you the help and support you really need? And you need to go somewhere else where you're gonna pay triple the amount of money back for the little bit of money you need to help with you and your family."

This is some of Ofa's story, a woman who is employed caring for New Zealand's elderly, while also trying to care for two young children on her own. She told her story to the Auckland City Mission in 2014.

Ofa's reality is the same reality that many of New Zealand's poor face - she just needs more money. Money for the basics and for the enriching educational experiences that would help her children thrive and succeed. She will try and get the money wherever she can, to cover her family's basic needs in the short-term. But fundamentally Ofa and her children are trapped in a cycle of poverty that only a sufficient income can take them out of. What Ofa and other families like her in poverty need right now is more cash, no strings attached.

In 2016, the Morgan Foundation will release the findings of our investigation into families and children in poverty in New Zealand. In our previous article we discussed our simple conclusion: that we should give them money.

Of course the response from middle New Zealand will be predictable: if we give the poor money they will spend it on alcohol and cigarettes. This is a myth. Instead we know that when the poor are given money they use it to improve their children's lives.

Firstly, we know that the poor and the wealthy spend their money in much the same way, and all parents try and prioritise their children's needs.

For example Statistics New Zealand reports that rich or poor, New Zealanders spent the same proportion of their weekly income on alcohol: about 2 per cent. That means rich people actually spend more on grog than poor people do: for the poorest that is $8 a week and the richest around $41. Those in poverty actually spend more of their weekly income on food compared to the wealthy: 18.4 per cent versus 15.3 per cent.

To give context to these figures, we can also look at what parents say about their income and spending. Almost all parents from low income groups in New Zealand who were spoken to in a recent study "mention that their primary motivation is to do the best for their children"  but that they needed to prioritise spending on the basics (food, transport, accommodation). Going without to cover these basics was common.

We all hear anecdotes of a poor person deciding to buy cigarettes instead of bread at the shop counter. Some people will always make poor decisions, but this is not the norm for families in poverty.

Look to the international research too. When the child poverty reduction strategy was enacted in Britain, single-parent families received about £30 extra a week. Researchers at the London School of Economics looked at how poor families spent that extra cash, and the results were surprising.

The extra cash was used to close the spending gap on children – low-income families spent more on their children and household items, in particular clothing, footwear, books, and holidays – approaching the levels higher income families spent on theirs. Not only that but spending on alcohol and tobacco reduced.

Conversely we see that when parents are given money and pushed into work, the money doesn't get used to buy extra items for their children; they only cover the additional work costs they have.

Why is this result so surprising? Because we've become so certain that child poverty is caused by bad parents that we can't countenance the possibility that poverty might actually be solved by money.

Parenting is a tough job, and most parents are doing their best for their kids as the research shows.  Poor parents are (mostly) not bad parents. When faced with the stress and financial constraints of poverty, most of us would struggle.

In our final article on Tuesday, we will look at the real reasons poverty causes so many children to suffer – most notably how poverty related stress affects families and children. This helps us understand why cash payments to the poor are the most effective policy intervention we have right now for improving children's lives in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Jess Berentson-Shaw is a science researcher at the Morgan Foundation. This is the second of three articles on family poverty.

- The Dominion Post
人们经常是不讲道理的、没有逻辑的和以自我为中心的。不管怎样,你要原谅他们。即使你是友善的,人们可能还是会说你自私和动机不良。不管怎样,你还是要友善。

使用道具 举报

Rank: 12Rank: 12Rank: 12

升级  83.4%

UID
292546
热情
2811
人气
4943
主题
69
帖子
1582
精华
6
积分
4751
阅读权限
30
注册时间
2011-8-9

畅游勋章 哈卡一族 10周年纪念 2019许愿勋章 美食活动

沙发
发表于 2016-1-3 03:32:21 |只看该作者 微信分享
阅。。。。。。。。。。。。 我还是觉得新西兰好多穷的都是懒 好多都是一家子抽烟喝酒
好好地活着

使用道具 举报

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

手机版| 联系论坛客服| 广告服务| 招贤纳士| 新西兰天维网

GMT+12, 2025-8-23 04:32 , Processed in 0.017104 second(s), 15 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X2 Licensed

Copyright 2001- Sky Media Limited, All Rights Reserved.

回顶部