Young Lives Policy Brief 1. The Social Impacts of Trade Liberalisation: how can childhood poverty be reduced?

Abstract

Debates on the consequences of globalisation mostly ignore issues related to children - particularly their wellbeing, rights and poverty experiences. However, globalisation and trade liberalisation are likely to have a major impact on the lives of poor children and their families. Given that children comprise a significant proportion of the population in developing countries, that impacts on children's welfare and poverty status tend to have a long-term effect on their development over their life-course and potentially generate intergenerational transfers of poverty, any discussion of the social impacts of trade must be approached from a child-sensitive perspective.

The international community emphasises trade liberalisation as a tool for poverty reduction. Yet trade liberalisation does not uniformly affect all segments of a population and its effects on poverty reduction are not always experienced in the short term. Developing country governments must pay attention to these differential impacts in order to mitigate the inequities that trade liberalisation is likely to exacerbate in developing countries. Policy impacts on children need to be traced from the changes they generate on macroeconomic variables (from consumer prices to individual household livelihoods) and the complexity of differential intra-household effects. Such analysis is important if policies are to compensate for any negative impacts and to harness the benefits of liberalisation to improve the conditions of children living in poverty.

This briefing paper begins by examining the general ways in which trade liberalisation can affect children. It then discusses findings from Young Lives (YL) quantitative and qualitative research in Peru and Ethiopia in order to demonstrate these impacts before discussing policy implications.

Citation

Oxford, UK: Young Lives. 12 pp.

Young Lives Policy Brief 1. The Social Impacts of Trade Liberalisation: how can childhood poverty be reduced?

Published 1 January 2005