Child abuse/neglect linked with greater reliance on government support in later life
People who suffered child abuse and neglect are three times more likely to need to access government income support payments in early adulthood than their peers, new research from the University of South Australia has shown.
In Australia, an estimated one in seven (or 2.1 million) people have experienced childhood abuse.
Senior researcher, UniSA’s Professor Leonie Segal, says that the dollar figures amplify the imperative to invest in prevention.
“By highlighting the burden associated with maltreatment, we’re providing a budgetary impetus to invest in preventive interventions and to support children and young people experiencing maltreatment to change their life trajectories,” Professor Segal says.
“Children affected by child abuse deserve to grow into young adults who can successfully navigate and ideally heal from their maltreatment experience. They deserve to be able to fully participate in society and the economy, and to do so without persevering disadvantage.”
“We know that adverse early-life experiences can have life-long impacts. We know that not enough is being done to prevent child abuse and neglect or minimise the harms.Putting a dollar figure on the longer-term burden of child maltreatment may be the only way that we can ramp up investment in prevention and better support children involved in child protection and their families.”
Specifically, the study shows that people who have had contact with child protection agencies are three times more likely to receive welfare payments as they get into early adulthood, which when extrapolated to the Australian population equates to more than $5.2 billion of the Federal Government’s income support budget.
Researchers have argued that their findings present a strong case for effective preventative and protective measures to halt child maltreatment and its longer-term outcomes.
By linking child protection records with national welfare income payment records researchers were able to demonstrate that the extra costs associated with child protection contact added 39 per cent to the national income support budget.
Other key findings from the research noted that individuals involved with child protection were:
- 5 times more likely to receive unemployment payments (Jobseeker or Youth Allowance)
- 5 times more likely to receive long-term disability payments
- 3 times more likely to receive parenting payments (with dependents under eight years and meeting income and assets tests)
For the 339,411 individuals in the study, cumulative income support payments (age 16 to 33 years) were $181,743 for individuals who had been placed in out of home care, compared to $38,570 for those with no child protection contact).
Possible factors accounting for what researchers termed “large downstream costs of child abuse and neglect” as they relate to income support include reduced employability (associated with lower educational attainment), difficulties with relationships, and physical and mental health conditions.
“It’s well-established that child abuse and neglect have a wide range of negative consequences across life,” UniSA’s Dr Emmanuel Gnanamanickam said.
“We have previously estimated the costs to the public hospital system, but this is the first time globally that the excess costs to government income support payments (associated with child protection contact) have been reported.
“By quantifying the relationship between child protection and income support payments, we’re able to see some of the longer-term effects of child abuse and neglect (and associated adverse childhood experiences), and their bearing on the national budget.”
The research was funded by the Channel 7 Children’s Research Foundation, a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to enriching the lives of children through research.
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