Monday, October 30, 2006

Suffer the Children II

This NYT article about child trafficking and forced labor in Africa is incredibly sad. UNESCO reports that youngsters in Sub-Saharan Africa are the least likely of anywhere in the world to attend primary education. The share of Sub-Saharan youngsters attending elementary schooling has increased 27% since 1999, but one third of youngsters still do not attend school, often because they must work or cannot afford school fees.

While this child's story is heartbreaking on a human level, there's a broader problem here than individual suffering. When very young children must work instead of learning basic skills like reading, writing and math; when their health and nutrition are sacrificed because their families lack adequate provisions for them or value them less than adults, you essentially have a society that is cannibalizing its future--physically, cognitively and psychologically. The labor these small children provide is not particularly efficient, and it comes at severe costs in terms of their long-term potential as workers and contributors to their society. These children's parents are in an untenable situation with few choices, but the choices they are making lock generations in a vicious cycle of ignorance and poverty. One of the long-term benefits of agricultural advances and industrialization was that, despite some serious abuses of child labor to begin with, eventually the resulting productivity gains allowed adult family members to support the family without child labor, freeing children to attend school, allowing the development of a more educated population, which increased productivity, raised living standards, and led to a virtuous cycle of more education, productivity and better living standards.* Improving basic health, education and nutrition for children in the developing world is critical.

(*As Jonathan Chait points out in the latest New Republic, this cycle has seemed in some ways to be a bit less virtuous of late in the U.S., since the wages of productivity gains in recent years flow almost entirely to the very richest Americans, while everyone else's living standards stagnate. But that doesn't detract from the broader point that getting the virtuous cycle started by equipping kids with basic skills is an important first step to building decent lives for people.)

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