- Provide quality and accessible services particularly for the most deprived children – including in areas such as nutrition, education and health which represent their multidimensional poverty – and drive them to fulfil their potential and end the cycle of poverty
- Support families and households to have a minimum income and ensure financial barriers don’t prevent children from reaching their potential.
For the past few years in Nigeria, the poverty rate has increased continuously that we have managed to overtake India as the poverty capital of the world. This statistic is in many ways alarming and even though it affects all of us as citizens, you can help but feel the children whose parents live below the poverty line will be the ones most affected.
Child poverty has been a great problem for many countries across the world and many specialists have tried to come up with various theories to help curb child poverty. Many of them believe that improving on the economic status of a country (economic growth and development) will lead to an improvement in the lives of poor families and their children.
According to a report for Save the Children titled “Child poverty – what drives it and what it means to children across the world” economic growth and development will not likely effectively curb child poverty. The report showed – which I agree with and Bethesda stands for – that for child poverty to be truly eradicated, policies and programmes need to directly and explicitly address their needs.
The needs in this scenario doesn’t mean just one or more important needs like health and education but must look to encompass every need a child might have. The long term benefit of better health and education will be overridden by other sustained needs they might need.
Through research I have come to see that for us to be able to eradicate or reduce child poverty we must: