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Home News

Shocking snapshot: Queensland children below the poverty line

byStaff writers
21 October 2021
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Struggle street: One in five Queensland children are from families struggling below the poverty line.

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CONSIDER this – one in five children in Queensland belong to families struggling to survive on income payments well below the poverty line.

It means that 212,300 children are growing up in the poorest families with many at risk of homelessness due to a shortage of affordable housing.

This is a shocking snapshot, and part of a wider national picture that is being highlighted as part of Anti-Poverty Week.

Friends on the Street: Rosies reaches out to those most in need – the lonely, abandoned, and marginalised within our communities.

Across Australia, 2.65 million adults and children are struggling to survive on income payments that are well below the poverty line with 940,000 children growing up in the poorest families.

“This Anti-Poverty Week we are calling on governments to unlock poverty for millions of Australians by raising income support above the poverty line and investing in social housing,” the executive director of PeakCare, Lindsay Wegener, said.
 
“Poverty affects far too many Australian children and families, diminishing their lives now and in the future,” Acting State Director, Save The Children, Anne Hodge, said.

“As one of the wealthiest countries in the world, it’s not right that one in five children grow up in poverty. Not having enough money to cover the necessities restricts daily life and crushes hope for the future.
 
“We hear shocking stories of mothers pretending they’ve eaten dinner while cooking when there’s not enough food to feed the whole family.

“We’ve also heard of children telling their younger siblings to drink less milk and not even telling their parents about after school activities and excursions because they know the family cannot afford them.”
 
Over 380,000 households in Queensland are receiving inadequate Commonwealth Rent Assistance that hasn’t seen a real increase in 21 years and only covers a third or a quarter of actual rent paid.
 
“Raising income support above the poverty line and government investment in social housing are the keys to unlocking poverty this Anti-Poverty Week,” Micah Projects chief executive officer Karyn Walsh said.

“Children can thrive and be healthy when they have what they need to develop well. 

 “To treat all children in Australia fairly, we need to ensure every family has enough money to cover the basics and a secure roof over their head.

“The weekly asking rent for all houses in Brisbane and regional Queensland has increased exponentially during the last financial year.

“Even the Government’s own Treasury review concluded ‘The maximum value of Commonwealth Rent Assistance has not kept pace with market rents, especially for low-income renters.”

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