Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Child Welfare

In my search today, I found a news story about the increasing poverty of a country that led to the increasing number of unemployment in the young generation. Complete information, see the following article which I reports from http://articles.sfgate.com.

Karla Washington, a graduate student, earning less than $ 11,000 per year from part-time job at the university. Karla Washington worries how she will pay for new school uniforms for her daughter five years.

The salary he received should include food, rent, health care, child care and an occasional splurge on the Blue Clues items for her only child.

Washington's economic woes appear throughout Nevada, where the nation's highest unemployment and foreclosure rates have combined to destroy the family and vacant land and construction environment.

A national study of child welfare to be published found Nevada had the highest rate of children whose parents are unemployed. The state is also home to the children most affected by foreclosure - 13 percent of all babies Perak State, toddlers and teens have been kicked out of their homes because the mortgage is paid, the study found.

Research conducted by a foundation Annie E. Casey found that child poverty increased 38% in the country in 2000-2009. As a result, 14.7 million children, 20%, poor in 2009. This represents an increase of 2.5 million from 2000, and about 17 percent of the nation's youth live in low-income homes.

At the first examination of the impact of recession on the foundations nation's children, the researchers concluded that low-income children would likely suffer from academic, economic and social long after their parents have been recovered.

"People who grew up in a financially secure situation find it easier to succeed in life, they are more likely to graduate from high school, more likely to graduate from college and these are the things that will lead to greater success in life, "said Stephen Brown, director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. "What we're looking at is a cohort of children who become adults because they may be less able to contribute to economic growth that could last for several generations

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Posted by: PARENTS GUIDECHILD, Updated at: Wednesday, September 14, 2011

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