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Measurement and Change in Deprivation and Exclusion in Australia. Peter Saunders and Melissa Wong Social Policy Research Centre, UNSW Presented to the Second Townsend Memorial Conference, University of Bristol, 22-23 January 2011. Outline of Presentation.
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Measurement and Change in Deprivation and Exclusion in Australia Peter Saunders and Melissa Wong Social Policy Research Centre, UNSW Presented to the Second Townsend Memorial Conference, University of Bristol, 22-23 January 2011
Outline of Presentation • Limitations of poverty research in Australia • Deprivation and social exclusion • Towards new indicators of disadvantage: Project background and aims • Measuring deprivation and social exclusion • Some results from the 2006 and 2010 surveys • Conclusions
Poverty: Why We Need a New Approach • No agreement about where to set the poverty line • Poverty line sensitive to shifts (Saunders and Hill, 2008) • Household income data not reliable • ‘…household income is not a good indicator of the total economic resources available to many people with very low recorded incomes...’ (ABS, 2006) • Poverty is more than just a lack of income - it is often multi-dimensional in terms of causes and consequences • The failure to provide such foundations in poverty line studies has exposed them for being out of touch with the lived realities of poverty (Lister, 2004) • Failure to indicate that the actual living conditions of those identified as poor are synonymous with poverty (Whiteford, 1997)
Poverty and Deprivation • ‘Individuals, families and groups in the population can be said to be in poverty when they lack the resources to obtain the types of diet, participate in activities, and have the living conditions and amenities which are customary, or at least widely encouraged or approved, in the societies to which they belong. Their resources are so seriously below those commanded by the average individual or family that they are, in effect, excluded from ordinary living patterns and activities’ (Townsend, 1979) • ‘…an enforced lack of socially perceived necessities (or essentials)’ (Mack and Lansley, 1985)
Poverty and Social Exclusion • ‘Social exclusion is a complex and multi-dimensional process. It involves the lack of denial of resources, rights, good and services, and the inability to participate in the normal relationships and activities, available to the majority of the people in society, whether in economic, social, cultural, or political arenas. It affects both the quality of life of individuals and the equity and cohesion of society as a whole’ (Levitas, 2007). • ‘An individual who is socially excluded if he or she does not participate in key activities in the society in which he or she lives’ (Burchardt, Le Grand and Piachaud, 2002)
Towards New Indicators of Disadvantage Project background and aims: 2006 • 2006 Left Out and Missing Out Study • Two year study grant funded by the Australian Research Council (ARC) Linkage grant • Industry partners: ACOSS, Mission Australia, Brotherhood of St Laurence and Anglicare Sydney • Main goal: To identify what constitutes the main elements of a minimally decent lifestyle in contemporary Australia and assess who is ‘missing out’ and ‘left out’ • First of its kind to apply a deprivation approach in Australia and the first to present a comprehensive national picture of social exclusion • Stage 1 (mid-2005): focus group discussions with community sector agency clients and staff • Stage 2 (early-2006): The Community Understanding of Poverty and Social Exclusion (CUPSE) survey sent out to 6,000 adult (18+) Australians – n = 2,704; response rate = 46.9% • Two welfare service client surveys in 2006 (n=673) and 2008 (n=1,237); based on a truncated version of CUPSE
Towards New Indicators of Disadvantage Project background and aims: 2010 • 2010 Social Disadvantage and Economic Recession – Promoting Inclusion and Combating Deprivation • Two year study grant funded by the Australian Research Council (ARC) Linkage grant • Industry partners: Anglicare Australia, ACOSS, The Benevolent Society, Mission Australia, Social Inclusion Unit (Australia, South Australia and Tasmania), St Vincent de Paul Society • Main focus: to examine the impact of global financial crisis on Australia and to examine the robustness of the methodologies involved • First study in Australia to explore the dynamics of social disadvantage • The Poverty and Exclusion in Modern Australia (PEMA) survey : - same sampling frame as CUPSE; n= 2,644; response rate = 46.1% • The PEMA follow-up survey: - re-surveying of 1,000 CUPSE respondents; n=533; response rate = 60.2% • PLEASE NOTE: PEMA data are (very) new and results are preliminary
The 24 Essential Items • Regular social contact with other people • Furniture in reasonable condition • Heating in at least one room of the house • Up to $500 in savings for an emergency • A separate bed for each child • A washing machine • Home contents insurance • Presents for family or friends at least once a year • Computer skills • Comprehensive motor vehicle insurance • A telephone • A week’s holiday away from home each year • Warm clothes and bedding, if it’s cold • Medical treatment if needed • Able to buy medicines prescribed by a doctor • A substantial meal at least once a day • Dental treatment if needed • A decent and secure home • Children can participate in school activities and outings • A yearly dental check-up for children • A hobby or leisure activity for children • Up to date schoolbooks and new school clothes • A roof and gutters that do not leak • Secure locks on doors and windows
Overlaps between Poverty, Deprivation and Social Exclusion • Poverty rate – 50 % median equivalised househould income • Deprivation – 3 or more conditions of deprivation • Social exclusion – 7 or more exclusion indicators
Overlaps between Poverty, Deprivation and Social Exclusion Community Sample 2006
Overlaps between Poverty, Deprivation and Social Exclusion Client Sample 2006
In Conclusion • New series of indicators of disadvantage for the Australian context • Deprivation method is capable of generating robust and plausible results • Following the global financial crisis, there has been a fall in deprivation and social exclusion rates in Australia • However, there is still a problem concerning deep exclusion that requires greater attention • Overlaps between poverty, deprivation and social exclusion greater for welfare service clients