Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Poverty-trap Wales – a grim verdict

from Wales Online

It's been a while since we've had an article on UK politics in regards to poverty. A policy adviser in the UK examines the impacts the government has made on poverty. - Kale

In an essay entitled Still Living on the Edge? published in the University of Wales Press academic series Contemporary Wales, Prof Dave Adamson, who helped shape the Welsh Assembly Government’s Communities First initiative, claims:

There has been little change in poverty levels in many communities since 1996;

Many adults in deprived areas expect to be limited by illness and this illness is not always due to industrial disease; Educational failure is the foundation of poverty in Wales, and; It was difficult to see any specific impact from WAG policies on poverty.

Prof Adamson, of the University of Glamorgan, has also cast doubts on whether the Communities First programme – which has spent millions on seeking to regenerate Wales’ poorest communities – could achieve its stated aims.

In an update to his groundbreaking 1996 essay Living on the Edge, Prof Adamson says: “Specific localities still bear the hallmarks of deep poverty, and the impact of government policy is at best marginal.

“For the residents of those communities there has been little change since 1996 and they can be seen very clearly to be still ‘living on the edge’.”

In reference to statistics which suggest that 25% of the population in Wales at any one time will have failed to achieve five GSCEs, and will continue to fail to benefit from adult educational opportunities, Prof Adamson says: “This educational failure is the foundation of poverty in Wales and relegates a significant proportion of the population to labour market failure and consequent patterns of low income, unemployment and benefit dependency.

“The geographical concentration of this population in the most disadvantaged localities in Wales presents an almost insurmountable barrier to the regeneration of our poorest communities.”

On the disproportionate health problems of certain Welsh communities, Prof Adamson says: “Contrary to stereotypical expectations, these statistics are not solely the result of injury and industrial disease inherited from coal mining, steel production and heavy manufacturing.

“Limiting long-term illness is evident in all age groups at higher rates than elsewhere in the UK.

“Communities First areas I have had first hand experience of include Maerdy (62.2% with long term limiting illness), Penygraig (57.5%), Penywaun (60.8%) and Treherbert (57.9%).

“Health aspiration is extremely low and local populations expect adulthood to include illness as a feature of life.

“Many young people carry caring responsibilities from an early age, with devastating impact on their educational achievement and their own health expectations.

“To sit in a public event in such communities is to observe community members in their 30s and 40s with severe mobility problems, respiratory difficulties, obesity, visible dental damage and no expectation that things could be different.

“The overall impact on the quality of life is immeasurable.”

In his analysis of anti-poverty initiatives undertaken by the Assembly Government, Prof Adamson states: “Despite considerable rhetoric to the contrary, Government in Wales has not yet created a more unified and ‘joined up’ approach to poverty which recognises the articulation of education, health and housing within the overall dynamic of poverty.”

Responding to UK and Assembly Government aims to halve child poverty by 2010 and eradicate it by 2020, Prof Adamson writes: “Clearly any assessment of progress toward that objective is premature and the 2010 review will be a critical verdict on WAG’s progress towards the 2020 target.

“It is difficult yet to see any specific impact from WAG derived policies.”

On the impact of Communities First, Prof Adamson refers to criticisms made by the Wales Audit Office, which concluded that regeneration policy was over-complicated and had poor strategic links with other policy and funding streams, including Objective One.

“Currently, it is clear that whilst many communities have responded with remarkable speed and confidence, this has neither been matched by Assembly Government funding or mainstream programme bending to assist them achieve regeneration of their communities,” he says.

Link to full article. May expire in future.

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