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Poverty and social exclusion in Wales analysed

One in four children in Wales lives in poverty, new research from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, shows. However poverty rates are falling faster than in England and Scotland, the study finds.

Wednesday 30 November 2005 11:36

The report shows that 640,000 people in Wales are living in poverty including 120,000 older people and 350,000 adults.

Other findings on poverty and social exlusion in Wales include:

  • Numbers of homeless households have doubled from 8,000 in 2000 to 16,000 in 2004.
  • Low pay is an increasingly significant cause of poverty. More than a third of poor households include an adult who is working.
  • A third of older people live alone. Numbers of older people receiving local authority home care has almost havled over the past decade.
  • 7.5 per cent of children get no GCSE passes, worse than in any England region.

Meanwhile the Child Poverty Action Group has published Forty Voices Against Child Poverty, to mark its 40th anniversary. Children's minister Beverley Hughes, England's children's commissioner Al Aynsley-Green and others have contributed to the publication.

Download Monitoring poverty and social exclusion in Wales 2005 free
http://www.jrf.org.uk/bookshop/details.asp?pubID=741

www.cpag.org.uk/fortyvoices

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