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The links
between women's and children's poverty
Research
shows that the burden of responsibility for managing family finances
in low income families generally falls on women. When there is debt
or barely enough to go round, women often do without basic necessities
themselves. Such stress can damage health and self-esteem, which
in turn can affect women’s job prospects and parenting abilities.
In this way women’s poverty is inexorably linked with that of children.
Ruth Lister argues that policy makers must acknowledge this
link in their efforts to eradicate child poverty.
Introduction
Poverty
managers
Maternal
well-being and child poverty
Mothers'
Earnings
Some
policy implications
References
Introduction
Children are at greater risk of poverty than adults in the UK. Women
are at greater risk of poverty than men. The link between the two
has been largely ignored in debates and policy-making around child
poverty. A recent report produced by the Poverty Working Group of
the Women’s Budget Group (WBG), on which CPAG is represented, underlines
the need to inject a gender dimension in to the strategy to end
child poverty.[Footnote 1]
The report combines analysis of the links between women’s and children’s
poverty with the ‘voices of experience’ derived from presentations
made by women with experience of poverty.
Although women’s
poverty matters in its own right, it is its implications for child
poverty that concern us here. These implications stem from two key
issues: women’s role as poverty managers and their disadvantaged
labour market position.
Poverty
managers
We know
from research that women in both lone and two-parent families carry
the main strain of making ends meet on an inadequate income. While
for many women getting by in such difficult circumstances can be
a source of pride, the stress involved can take a toll on their
physical and mental health and on their overall morale. Poverty
is particularly stressful where there is debt. Just as women tend
to manage poverty on a day to day basis, so they tend to take the
main responsibility for dealing with debts. In two-parent families,
managing poverty is made more difficult where resources channelled
to fathers are not shared fairly with the rest of the family.[Footnote
2]
As
part of their role as poverty managers, mothers frequently act as
shock absorbers, shielding their children (and sometimes partners)
from the full impact of the inadequate financial resources at their
command. This can mean mothers going without food, clothing and
warmth. This is not just about meeting their children’s material
needs
but also about defending them against the stigma and ‘Othering’
all too often associated with poverty.[Footnote
3] The process of Othering is one by which ‘the poor’
are treated as if they were ‘other’ to – that is, different from
– the ‘non-poor’. For children and young people, clothing in particular
acts as a signifier of difference. The ‘wrong’ clothing can spell
bullying and social exclusion.[Footnote
4]
A common refrain
among the women with experience of poverty in the WBG Voices of
Experience sessions was the disrespectful attitudes of others towards
themselves and their children. This combined with the difficulties
of being poor in a flagrantly consumerist society to make them feel
inadequate and guilty. As one woman put it, ‘you feel hopeless that
you can’t supply your children with the things that make them feel
normal’. For women in minority ethnic groups, who are at particularly
high risk of poverty and who may also be having to deal with racism
towards themselves and their children, the situation is especially
difficult.
One way in which
women may try to counteract poverty’s negative material and psychological
impact is through collective action in self-help and community groups,
often around the needs of their children. A lone mother told the
WBG of how, feeling trapped and depressed, she had helped to set
up a self-help group for lone mothers called Sisters Are Doing It.
She described how they want to raise aspirations:
.
. . and reach for the sky, then at least if you don’t get the sun
or moon you may get a few stars. I am still in debt, I still can’t
get a baby-sitter when I need one but I believe that I can make
a difference. I have changed my way of thinking and instead of feeling
defeated I started to feel angry about social injustice.[Footnote
5]
Maternal
well-being and child poverty
When mothers do feel defeated by poverty, or are simply ground down
by it, it affects their ability to fulfill the parenting and bread-winning
roles that government sees as crucial to a successful child poverty
strategy. When, as one woman told the WBG, ‘poverty…sucks you in
and breaks you’, it makes it difficult to be an effective parent
or jobseeker/worker.
To
take parenting first: its importance is highlighted in many official
statements on child poverty. Margaret Hodge, for instance, when
Minister for Children, explained to the House of Commons Work and
Pensions Committee that parenting is ‘central to the child poverty
agenda’ because ‘the quality of parenting in the home’ is the factor
which makes most ‘difference to a child’s outcome’.[Footnote
6] What needs to be emphasised is that the ‘quality of
parenting’ is not independent of the material circumstances in which
parenting is undertaken. To suggest otherwise feeds into popular
perceptions of poverty as ‘caused’ by inadequate parenting. The
interim report of the Fabian Commission on Life Chances and Child
Poverty (see 'Making the public case for tackling
poverty and inequality', Poverty 121) recounted the findings
of a deliberative workshop in which, to the extent participants
believed poverty existed in the UK, they blamed it on inadequate
parenting: ‘parents in poverty were repeatedly portrayed as wasteful,
selfish and neglectful to the detriment of their children’.[Footnote
7]
The argument
is a simple one: managing poverty and protecting children from its
worst effects is stressful and this can damage mothers’ physical
and mental health, morale and overall sense of well-being. This
is likely to affect their ability to be the kind of parents they
aspire to be and to give their children the kind of childhood and
upbringing they want for them. This in turn could have implications
for the ability of their children to escape poverty as they grow
up. This vicious circle operates particularly strongly for lone
mothers but can also affect mothers in couples who lack economic
autonomy, some of whom may feel themselves to be trapped in abusive
and violent relationships. It is exacerbated by poor housing and
environmental conditions.
There
is a long line of research pointing to the damaging effects of poverty
on parental capacities. A classic study was that carried out by
Harriett Wilson, one of CPAG’s founders. It showed how the very
survival strategies adopted by parents can get in the way of addressing
the needs of individual children.[Footnote
8] More recently, an overview of messages from government-funded
research into parenting cited a key finding from a study by Deborah
Ghate and Neil Hazel:
.
. . poverty is at the root of most problems. Parents in poor environments
don’t see themselves as having ‘problems with parenting’ as much
as having problems with poverty. Parents reported that overall,
tackling material poverty and deficits in family resources was their
prime concern and that poverty was the cause of many of their problems.[Footnote
9]
As well as the
impact on parenting in general, poverty can make it harder for parents
to be effectively involved in their children’s education, another
role they are called to carry out by government. In its second term
in office, the Labour Government did acknowledge the impact of poverty
on parenting. However, the policy lesson that it seemed to draw
was the need for more parenting support services. These are valuable
and can help low income mothers cope with the very difficult circumstances
in which they are trying to fulfill their responsibilities as parents.
But nothing is said about tackling maternal poverty in its own right.
Poor physical
and mental health and low morale also have a damaging impact on
mothers’ ability to seek and find paid work, which is at the heart
of the Government’s child poverty strategy. As Alan Marsh suggests,
on the basis of his research into lone parent families:
.
. . the first step in restoring the optimism and sense of well-being
essential to turn the view of even the most disadvantaged lone parent
outward towards work, is to improve the present standard of living.
Hardship reduces morale and allows little room for the kind of optimism
and forward planning that personal advisers and work-focused interviews
hope to encourage.[Footnote
10]
We also know
from more recent research that poor health makes it harder to find
work, although to what extent low morale and the stress associated
with managing poverty are intermediary factors is not clear.
Mothers’
earnings
Although
paid work is central to the Government’s child poverty strategy,
hitherto the focus has been primarily on the gap between ‘work-rich’
and ‘work-poor’ families so as to ensure at least one earner in
each household. Less attention has been paid to the role that women’s
earnings can play in lifting or keeping two-parent families out
of poverty where the father is also in paid work. Although this
is beginning to change to some extent with policies designed to
encourage the partners of low paid workers to look for work, it
still feels marginal to the child poverty strategy.
Cross-national
analysis suggests that mothers’ employment reduces poverty typically
by a factor of 4 or 5.[Footnote
11] In the UK, the official Households Below Average
Income statistics show that the risk of poverty is reduced considerably
where there is a second earner. Analysis by Jane Millar and Karen
Gardiner found that among couples with children in 2000–01, only
one in ten low paid men earned enough to keep their family out of
poverty on their own.[Footnote
12] In nearly three in ten cases, a partner’s earnings
lifted the family out of poverty. The authors suggest that two sources
of earnings are crucial in keeping couples out of poverty.
The employment
rate of women varies between ethnic groups. It is particularly low
among Pakistani and Bangladeshi women and those in this group who
are in paid work are more likely to be low paid than other women.
This may well be a contributory factor in the shamefully high levels
of child poverty among Pakistani and Bangladeshi families.
Mothers’ earnings
are important not only in the short term in keeping two-parent families
out of poverty; they can also be crucial in guarding against future
hardship should the family split up. Similarly, paid work does significantly
reduce the risk of poverty among lone parent families. That said,
it is not a panacea, particularly in the context of a labour market
in which women are still systematically disadvantaged and their
work under-valued. Moreover, the barriers to paid work remain high
for many low-income women. As we have seen, poor health can itself
constitute a barrier. Childcare and transport are other barriers
highlighted by research and the experience of women in poverty themselves.
Also
of potential relevance is domestic violence, an issue raised at
the Voices of Experience workshop. Domestic violence can undermine
women’s autonomy and the self-confidence needed to seek paid work.
A review of the US evidence indicates that violent men can ‘sabotage
their partners’ attempts to become self-sufficient through education,
job-training or employment’.[Footnote
13] While such evidence is not to my knowledge available
in the UK , we do know that domestic violence is frequently implicated
in the breakdown of relationships.
While many women
living on benefit do desperately want to find a job that will help
them get out of poverty, not all feel that it is ‘right’ to take
paid work while their children are young. Moreover, juggling paid
work and active parenting, including support for their children’s
education, can be extremely stressful.
Thus, on the
one hand, maximising mothers’ labour market participation is an
important element in tackling child poverty (and in promoting their
own financial independence and protection from poverty). The continued
barriers and disadvantaged labour market position that they continue
to face mean that any anti-poverty strategy that relies on paid
work as the main route out of poverty has to be an explicitly gendered
strategy. On the other hand, it needs to be recognised that paid
work is not always necessarily in the immediate best interests of
either children or their mothers.
Some
policy implications
This points to the continued importance of adequate financial support
for those not in paid work. In particular, the analysis here supports
one of the ten steps outlined in CPAG’s Manifesto to eradicate child
poverty:[Footnote 14]
the need to increase the adult income support (IS) payments in line
with those for children. During its first two terms in office, New
Labour doubled the real value of the IS rates for children aged
under 11. This is a significant achievement of which too few people
are aware (not least because the Government itself tended to keep
quiet about it). The impact of this increase, however, is blunted
by the failure to make any real increase at all in the rates paid
to meet the needs of parents (and other adults). Given that the
adult rates are higher than those for children, this failure has
serious consequences for overall family income. However hard mothers
work to protect their children from the worst consequences
of an inadequate income, it is not possible to divorce the poverty
of children from that of their parents.
The
adult rates of benefit are important not only because of their effect
on the living standards of families with children but also because
they can affect the health of unborn children. There is growing
concern about the health status of first time mothers who become
pregnant while on benefit, particularly in the case of young mothers
who receive a reduced adult rate of benefit. This has implications
for the health and physical development of babies born into low
income households. The Maternity Alliance is campaigning for the
extension of eligibility for child tax credit to pregnant women
and for young pregnant women and mothers (aged 16–24) to receive
the same level of support from income-related benefits as older
recipients.[Footnote 15]
For many of
the low income women involved in the Voices of Experience sessions,
benefits were not just too low but were also experienced as confusing
and unpredictable. Higher priority for child benefit within the
overall package of financial support for children would provide
greater security, particularly during transitions in parents’ partnership
status. Of particular concern was the benefit position of mothers
subject to immigration controls and asylum laws.
A
gendered child poverty strategy reinforces the case for adequate
childcare provision. Despite the development, for the first time
in the UK, of a national childcare strategy, many of the women in
the Voices of Experience sessions felt that provision was still
patchy or unaffordable. In some places, services were being shut
down. Listening to women with experience of poverty also highlights
the importance of more generous provision to support community and
self-help groups. These can play a transformative role in mothers’
lives and can strengthen the capacities of both individuals and
communities to cope with poverty and to work to get out of it. The
searing impact of debt on the lives of mothers in poverty indicates
that more effective action needs to be taken against debt. Debt
is linked in some cases to the demands of a consumer culture, exacerbated
by advertising directed at children. The New Economics Foundation
argues that ‘curbing commercial advertising aimed at young people
would be an important step in creating a well-being society’.[Footnote
16]
While women
living in poverty do not constitute a homogenous group, the clear
links between mothers' and children's poverty point to some common
policy priorities. These need to be underpinned by greater gender
awareness and more systematic analysis in official documents such
as Opportunity for All and the Households Below Average
Income statistics. Action on women’s poverty cannot be treated
as an add-on to the serious business of tackling child poverty.
It is critical to the long-term success of the child poverty strategy
and it needs publicly to be recognised as such.
Ruth Lister
is Professor of Social Policy, Loughborough University and Donald
Dewar Visiting Professor of Social Justice, University of Glasgow.
References
1.
WBG, Women’s and Children’s Poverty: making the links, Women’s
Budget Group, 2005, available at www.wbg.org.uk
[back
to text]
2. See, for instance, J Goode, C Callender and
R Lister, Purse or Wallet? Gender Inequalities within Families
on Benefits, Policy Studies Institute, 1998 [back
to text]
3. R Lister, Poverty, Polity Press, 2004
[back to text]
4.
See, for instance, T Ridge, Childhood Poverty and Social Exclusion,
Policy Press, 2002
[back to text]
5.
B White in WBG, Women’s and Children’s Poverty: making the links,
Women’s Budget Group, 2005, available at www.wbg.org.uk,
p. 27 [back to text]
6. Work and Pensions Committee, Child Poverty
in the UK, Second Report of the Work and Pensions Committee,
The Stationery Office, 2004, para 184 [back
to text]
7. Fabian Commission on Life Chances and Child
Poverty, Life Chances: What does the public really think about
poverty?, Fabian Society, 2005, p. 9 [back
to text]
8. H Wilson and G W Herbert, Parents and
Children in the Inner City, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1978
[back to text]
9.
D Quinton, Supporting Parents: Messages from Research, Jessica
Kingsley Publishers, 2004, p. 210 [back
to text]
10. A Marsh, ‘Helping British lone parents
get and keep paid work’ in J Millar and K Rowlingson (eds.), Lone
Parents, Employment and Social Policy, Policy Press, 2001, p32
[back to text]
11. G Esping-Andersen, Why we Need a New
Welfare State, Oxford University Press, 2002
[back to text]
12. J Millar and K Gardiner, Low Pay, Household
Resources and Poverty, Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2004
[back to text]
13.
R M Tolman and J Raphael, ‘A review of research on welfare and domestic
violence’, Journal of Social Issues, 56 (4), 2000, p. 656
[back to text]
14. CPAG, Ten steps to a society free of
child poverty, Child Poverty Action Group, 2005 [back
to text]
15.
Maternity Alliance, Baby Manifesto, Maternity Alliance, 2005.
If child tax credit were extended to pregnant women, I would suggest
it would be more appropriate to call it a ‘pregnancy credit’. [back
to text]
16. NEF, A Well-being Manifesto for a Flourishing
Society, New Economics Foundation, 2004, p15 [back
to text]
Poverty
121, Summer 2005
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