Thursday, September 19, 2024

This family is struggling to get by. Why don’t we know how many are like them?

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At 16, Joshua Patrick has a lot on his plate, from helping care for his younger sister with complex health needs to being an advocate for young people’s issues. 

On top of all that, while still in high school, he also worries about how his family will make ends meet.

“Sometimes we’re really scraping just to pay the bills and afford food for the family,” Joshua says, sitting in his family’s home in Northam, an hour-and-a-half out of Perth.

Joshua and his mum Laura support calls for poverty to be measured, and income supports to be lifted above the poverty line.(ABC News: Keane Bourke)

“Mum, actually quite often, misses out on dinner so that there’s actually a portion size suitable for the rest of the family the following night.

“Even myself, I’ve actually somewhat developed a fear of serving up just in case there’s not enough for everyone in the family.”

It’s because of these experiences that he’s supporting a campaign calling for the federal government to join other nations in measuring, and committing to end, child poverty.

Unseen effects of poverty weigh heavily

Josh’s 10-year-old sister Charlotte has complex medical needs, including cerebral palsy, seizure disorder and a heart defect.

It means Josh’s mum Laura can’t work, leaving the family of six to scrape by with help from a carer’s payment. 

Joshua Patrick with sister Charlotte

Joshua regularly helps care for his sister Charlotte, who has a number of complex health needs.(ABC News: Keane Bourke)

The family can point to lots of outward signs of the impacting poverty is having, like paid out-of-school activities being out of the question, and letting car insurance lapse because it’s too expensive.

But they say there’s also a side to their poverty you can’t see.

Laura West outside home

Laura says she worries everytime there’s a white envelope in her letterbox in case it’s another bill.(ABC News: Keane Bourke)

“Because we do our absolute utmost to make sure that there’s always food available, I think [people] may look at us from the outside and not realise just actually how tough and how much stress and budgeting and thought … goes into making sure that my children are fed and clothed,” Laura said, standing in a backyard with dying grass she can’t afford to water.

“There’s a perpetual underlying stress that families face.

“The stress of trying to give them the best childhood that you can possibly give them, and as many opportunities as you can possibly facilitate, on a really, really, really tight budget.”

Josh says he’s felt the effects of poverty throughout his schooling, while his youngest sister is stuck on a public waitlist to have learning difficulties assessed.

No official measure of poverty in Australia

Child poverty is tricky to measure, but the OECD reports Australia as having the fourteenth-highest poverty rate among countries it looks at, behind New Zealand and the United States, but ahead of the UK and Canada.

Locally, academics like Roger Wilkins have been updating the Henderson Poverty Line for decades – re-calculating the rate first set in the mid-1970s to account for increasing incomes.

Professor Roger Wilkins

Professor Roger Wilkins says despite challenges, governments need to measure poverty lines to understand how big the problem is.(ABC News: Simon Tucci)

“In developed countries we tend to think of poverty as a relative concept, in terms of ‘are your living standards adequate, acceptable for the community in which you exist?'” he said.

It’s an area where the Henderson Line can fall down, leading the Australian Council of Social Service and the University of New South Wales to estimate their own lines, based on 50 per cent and 60 per cent of  median income.

‘It’s able to be ignored’: The Australia Institute

Their most recent estimate is that 750,000 children – or one in six young people – were living in poverty in 2019/20.

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