New research into child abuse suggests current social policies aimed at reining in New Zealand's high rates of abuse are "inadequately informed''.
A Child Poverty Action Group report, which analysed abuse notifications received by Child Youth and Family between 2008 and 2012, found while higher rates of child abuse were associated with socio-economic deprivation, policies which focused specifically on income levels were unlikely to be the correct approach.
In particular, results from the report questioned the focus placed on benefit dependency and child abuse by the Government's White Paper on Vulnerable children.
The group's convenor and social security spokesman Associate Professor Mike O'Brien, from Auckland University's School of Counselling, Human Services and Social Work, said policy makers needed to address broader issues of poverty and its relationship to demographics and access to decent employment, housing, health and other services.
''[Social Development Minister Paula Bennett] has made a great play about the link between people being on benefit's and child abuse.