Bangkok Post

IN WEALTHY GERMANY, GROWING UP POOR IS A DEAD-END STREET

In Europe’s top economy, youth at the bottom of the social ladder face many obstacles in climbing

- By Isabelle Le Page

Chancellor Angela Merkel touted Germany as a country “in which we live well and happily” during her re-election campaign. But those words ring hollow to the one in five children living in poverty in Europe’s top economy, with little prospect of climbing the social ladder.

It’s just gone 3pm at the Lichtenber­g youth centre in east Berlin, where youngsters are laying out cherry tomatoes and carefully chopped cucumber as they get ready to prepare dinner together.

For many of them, the weekday ritual is an eagerly awaited moment.

“We notice it a lot especially among the teenagers, they ask us: ‘When can we eat? I haven’t eaten all day’,” said Patric Tavanti, head of the centre run by the charity Caritas.

Many of the youngsters’ parents often lack the money or the time to provide regular meals, he said.

In Europe’s powerhouse, the economy is humming, public coffers have never been fuller and unemployme­nt is at its lowest since reunificat­ion in 1990.

Yet some 20% of under-18s live in “relative poverty”, according to the family ministry, defined as living in households that have to get by on less than 60% of the average German household income.

For a single parent with one child, that amounts to a monthly net income below 1,192 euros (45,993 baht). For a family with four children, it’s under 2,355 euros.

Despite record employment, only a third of the parents of Germany’s roughly 2.8 million impoverish­ed children have jobs, said Heinz Hilgers, of the Child Protection Associatio­n (Kinderschu­tzbund).

Growing up poor takes its toll in many other, more insidious ways.

“It’s a downward spiral,” said professor Klaus Hurrelmann, of the Hertie School of Governance in Berlin.

“The children feel excluded, they start to feel ashamed when they can’t join in school excursions or invite friends over for a birthday party. They end up losing confidence in themselves and struggle at school,” he said.

Mr Tavanti, of the Berlin youth centre, said it was a phenomenon he had witnessed first-hand.

“Just one of our adolescent­s is currently trying to pass the Abitur,” he said, referring to the secondary-school leaving certificat­e required to pursue higher education.

He believes many German schools struggle to meet the needs of these at-risk children, who often come from immigrant families or single-parent homes.

Compoundin­g the problem is Germany’s early-age education sorting system, critics say, which can prematurel­y put disadvanta­ged pupils on a less academic route, potentiall­y leading to lower-paying and less secure jobs.

Decrying what it calls “hereditary poverty” in Germany, a study by the Bertelsman­n Foundation think tank found that just some three to 16% of households managed to cross the poverty line.

“That’s how generation­s of poor children become poor adults and poor parents,” said Mr Hilgers, of the Child Protection Associatio­n.

As well as being a stain on Germany’s conscience, it’s “a huge economic risk”, he warned, in a greying nation already grappling with a shortage of skilled labour.

Germany’s new government, a repeat coalition of Ms Merkel’s conservati­ves and the centre-left Social Democrats, has vowed to tackle the challenges by raising child benefits, offering more child care facilities and all-day schools to make it easier for parents to work.

But for lawmaker Lisa Paus, of the opposition Greens party, those promises don’t go far enough.

She said Germany urgently needed to do more to support single parents.

“Poverty often starts when couples split up,” she said.

Indeed, statistics show that 45% of children raised by a sole parent, usually their mother, live in relative poverty.

Some politician­s and campaigner­s have called for a basic monthly income for children of around 500 euros for the lowest-earning households.

But for a government determined to maintain a balanced budget, any hint of lavish spending is anathema.

Instead, Family Minister Franziska Giffey plans to introduce a law in coming months aimed at improving the quality of daycare facilities, with a bigger emphasis on early-child developmen­t.

“Every child should be allowed to make their own way, regardless of where they come from and where they grew up,” she said.

 ??  ?? DRAWING INSPIRATIO­N: Drawings are seen on a window as children play outside a family centre and kindergart­en in Berlin.
DRAWING INSPIRATIO­N: Drawings are seen on a window as children play outside a family centre and kindergart­en in Berlin.

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