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REPORT
Children stay poor in post-communist
boom
Although the formerly communist countries of Eastern
Europe and Central Asia are seeing substantial economic improvement,
millions of their children still languish in poverty and the problem is
worsening in some countries, according to a report by Unicef. Child
populations are rising most quickly in the region's most impoverished
countries, while at the same time public health expenditures in some of
the countries have declined at a rate sharper than their economies are
rising. “Economic growth alone does not benefit children,” Unicef's
executive director, Carol Bellamy, said at the launch of the report.
The report notes that a full assessment of the child
poverty conditions in the 27 countries surveyed — the former Soviet
republics and once-communist countries of Eastern Europe — is difficult
because of a dearth of recent data and widely varying definitions from
country to country of what constitutes poverty. In nine countries for
which recent data were available, 14 million of 44 million children were
living in poverty, the report said. The countries cited were Poland,
Russia, the Czech Republic, Belarus, Albania, Azerbaijan, Armenia,
Georgia and Kyrgyzstan.
Azerbaijan was among the countries where annual
per-capita spending on public health declined, despite a 10 per cent
rise in national income between 1998 and 2001. In Tajikistan, the
poorest of the former Soviet republics, health expenditures stayed flat
despite 7 per cent economic growth. (AP)
Jim Heintz
14 October 2004
http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/story.jsp?story=571911
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