"Sex, booze and horrid friends: those three evils dragged Britain's youngsters to the bottom of a 'child well-being' index published this week by UNICEF", notes the weekly. "The UN agency ranked 21 rich countries on everything from babies' birth-weight to how often children chat to their parents. The Netherlands came top, followed by those infernal Scandinavians, who always seem to do well in such contests, and a raft of Catholics. Britain brought up the rear, standing shoulder to shoulder with America. Young Britons fared badly in each of the six broad categories. ... UNICEF's methods are open to criticism. Poverty was measured mainly in relative terms. Britain, with 16% of children in households where income was less than half the median, was worsted only by America. But this says more about inequality than it does about deprivation: 50% of median family income in 2000 was $7,000 in Hungary, when translated to reflect purchasing-power parity, but $18,000 in Britain. Many might prefer to live on the latter. Other results were self-assessed, which may have played to Britons' love of complaining." (15/02/2007)
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