Earners' money should go straight to their family.
What should we do about child poverty? The current Children's Commissioner, Dr Russell Wills, has made the problem a priority for his five-year term and this year he assembled an expert advisory group to come up with solutions. It issued some proposals near the end of August and wants comment on them by this Friday.
Any discussion of poverty in this country should be prefaced with a reminder that social commentators who use the term are not talking about the abject squalor and misery most people imagine "poverty" to be. They are talking about "relative poverty", defined as a proportion of the average household's income in the country concerned.
Under their definition it does not matter how high a country's median income rises, households living on less than 60 per cent of the median disposable income (after housing costs) will be below the "poverty line". It will be impossible to alleviate poverty thus defined unless all incomes are equalised. The more precise term for poverty in a country such is New Zealand is inequality.
Inequality means the household cannot afford many of the things that most people in the same country take for granted. In the Herald yesterday the expert advisory group co-chair, Dr Jonathan Boston, used an OECD index of nine items that the average household in rich countries can afford: a warm house, a phone, colour television, washing machine, car, a meat meal every second day, an annual week's holiday away from home, the ability to pay bills on time and keep at least $1500 in the bank for unexpected expenses.