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Fighting Poverty and Inequality – task of the health- and welfare worker?. Poverty and Inequality in the EU and its Impact on the social worker Input by Quinta Ansem. Content of the presentation. A quick story about EAPN Being poor in the EU The effect on People Experience Poverty
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Fighting Poverty and Inequality –task of the health- and welfare worker? Poverty and Inequality in the EU and its Impact on the social worker Input by Quinta Ansem
Content of the presentation • A quick story about EAPN • Being poor in the EU • The effect on People Experience Poverty • Equality versus Inequality • The effect on health- and social workers • Some questions to be answered
EAPN Origins • Established in 1990 • A network of independent NGOs • Defending what?
EAPN Membership and Financing • 26 National Networks • 23 European Organisations • financial support?
What do we know about Poverty in the EU? • EU Poverty Programmes • Social OMC • Progress?
Poverty in the EU (2007) • 60% of median equivalised income • EU Average 17% (79 million people) • 25% Romania (83 Euro) • 10% Netherlands (910 Euro) 10 % Czech Republic (271Euro)
In Work Poverty (2007) • In work poverty rate • EU Average 8% of working population (18 million people approx) • 14% Greece (510 Euro) • 3% Czech Republic (271 Euro)
Significant damp problems in housing • EU Average: 18% • 37% Poland • 5 % Malta and Finland
Lack of indoor flushing toilet for sole use of household • EU Average: 4% (18.5 million people) • 44 % Romania, 34% Bulgaria, • 1% EU 15 (the old members of EU) • 3% Slovakia
Material Deprivation in the EU • Basic necessities • EU Average 17% • 45% in Latvia (Romania and Bulgaria higher) • 3% in Luxembourg 6% Sweden and Netherlands • 40% below poverty line but ……………….. 13% above the poverty line
People Experiencing Poverty (PEP) • ‘I am undocumented, so for you I don’t exist’ • ‘waking up in bad housing conditions which saps the will to do anything’ • ‘being paid regularly, but my debts still mounting up anyway’ • ‘hard to talk about, but when I did start to talk to others I felt no different from them and I wasn’t embarrassed’
Social protection – a cost or an investment? • Social Spending reduces risk of poverty • Increased expenditure on social protection
Conclusion • Effective Social protection systems not only reduce poverty, and increase security, but provide an essential platform for participation, and social cohesion as well as supporting growth.
Violence http://www.equalitytrust.org.uk/why/evidence/rich-and-poor-countries
Wealth and Inequality in the EU EAPN Motto: ‘You can’t speak about the fight against poverty and remain silent about wealth’
Building Trust: The role of Democracy • More Equal Societies work better for Everyone • The rich developed societies have reached a turning point in human history • Politics should now be about the quality of social relations and how we can develop harmonious and sustainable societies • And doing that in respect and support with those who need the respect and support the most.
The impact of inequality on the health- and social workers • Good intentions • Increasingly numbers of poor • matching mental and physical health • Work Overload • Little effects • low salaries
Area of tension • Most Welfare- or Health worker is paid out of public money • Policy changing's (political changes) • Being subsidizes • No (or little) cooperation with local government • Only project finding • No (real) participation from the PEP
Question for the discussion • Can the health- and welfare worker really make a difference in fighting poverty and social exclusion? • Yes…. or No? • Changes? • And how can the PEP be involved in this fight?
Giving the oor an equal chance to participate in all kind of processes, is a vital part of fighting overty and social exclusion The basis thinking of EAPN Netherlands