|
Skip
to this weeks poll |
Send to friend
25
July 2010 Problem
or Fact of Life?
|
Printer
friendly version (PDF)
View
>>>
|
"What is
happening to our young people? They disrespect their elders,
they disobey their parents. They ignore the law. They riot in
the streets inflamed with wild notions. Their morals are
decaying. What is to become of them?"
There is a widespread perception that today’s youth are more
badly behaved than ever before. The fact is,
however, that such concerns have always been with us. The
above quote is attributed to Plato in 400 BC – and the
following quote is an inscription on a 6,000-year-old Egyptian tomb:
“We live in a decaying age. Young people no longer respect their parents.
They are rude and impatient. They frequently inhabit taverns
and have no self-control."
To get a better idea of what is really going on
with our young let’s have a look at some research.
First of all, the recent death by alcohol poisoning
of a 16 year-old King’s College school student has raised
serious concerns about binge drinking amongst young people.
The Chief Coroner set the record straight by releasing data to
show that the number of young people who have died as a result
of binge drinking, since the beginning of July 2007, is 12.
Between July 2007 and February 2010 the number of people of
all age groups who have died of alcohol poisoning stands at
83.
According to a Law Commission report on youth and
alcohol from 1996 to 2003, the percentage of publicly funded
hospitalisations for young people aged from 15 to 19 -where
the primary diagnosis was alcohol related - fell from 15.3
percent in the year 2000 to 12.5 percent in 2003.[1] This
included the period where the drinking age was lowered.
When it comes to traffic accidents, Ministry of
Transport figures show that in the 12 months to September
2009, young drivers aged from 15 to 19 were involved in
crashes that resulted in 67 deaths, 21 of which involved
alcohol. However, over the years, the number of road deaths
involving young drivers has reduced dramatically from the peak
in 1987 when 195 young drivers died. Similarly, the number of
young drivers involved in crashes where alcohol was recorded
as a factor has dropped from a maximum of 418 accidents in
1995, to 298 in 2003.[2]
While road fatalities attract a great deal of
attention and public money, more New Zealanders die from
suicide. Between 2004 and 2007, while 1,654 people died on the
roads, suicide claimed 2,008 lives. Of those, 198 were young
people between the ages of 15 and 19.
According to a report “Doing Better for
Children” published by the OECD last year, the latest youth
suicide statistics puts New Zealand above all other OECD
countries: New Zealand’s rate of 15.9 deaths per 100,000
young people aged 15 to 19 compares with a rate of only 3
deaths per 100,000 in the UK, 7.7 in the US, 8.5 in Australia,
9.5 in Ireland, and 10 in Canada. The OECD average is 6.9
deaths per 100,000 15 to 19 year olds.[3]
New Zealand
’s highest recorded rate of youth suicide was in 1997 when 72 young
people in the 15 to 19 age group took their own lives. For the
younger 10 to 14 age group, the highest number was 12 children
who died in 1998. In comparison, in 2007, 42 young people in
the 15 to 19 year age group died, and 2 children aged between
10 and 14.[4]
When it comes to youth crime, the trend is
downwards. A Ministry of Justice report shows that the child
apprehension rate for 10 to 13 year olds has fallen from a
peak of 543 per 10,000 head of population in 1996 to 336 in
2008, and the youth apprehension rate for 14 to 16 year olds
has fallen from a peak of 1,926 in 1996 to 1,572 in 2008.[5]
In addition, both child and youth apprehensions for property
offences, which is the most common category of offence, have
fallen to an all time low in 2007 and 2008. When it comes to
violent offences, while child apprehensions are stable, youth
rates had increased by 13 percent. However, overall offending
by young people over the last decade has fallen by 15 percent.
In any policy area where there is heightened public concern,
there is a temptation for politicians to propose high profile
‘solutions’ designed to appease community unease. The
real question is whether such solutions are largely window
dressing, leading to more regulation and higher taxpayer
costs, or whether they will genuinely produce better outcomes.
The National Government has already announced a
range of policy responses that they claim will improve
outcomes for young people and society as a whole. These
include raising the driving age from 15 to 16, a move that
they expect will save 4 lives a year, and introducing a zero
blood alcohol limit for drivers under the age of 20, which
they expect will save 2 lives a year.[6]
In the area of youth offending, falling crime rates have not stopped politicians from pushing ahead
with a very expensive youth justice facility which opened this
weekend in Rotorua at a cost of $47 million. This new
facility, which has 30 beds for 12 and 13 year old young
offenders, takes the number of such residences around the
country, to 4.
However, the strategy of
placing young offenders together in large institutions has
been criticised by a former Youth Court Judge who has labeled
them as a ‘gateway to prison’. Carolyn Henwood is strongly
of the view that the relatively small number of children who
commit most of the country’s youth crime need very close
individual care, not institutionalisation.[7]
With regards to alcohol, while the Law Commission
in its recent report recommended a number of sweeping law
changes - including substantially increasing the excise tax,
introducing stronger regulations relating to the sale and
advertising of alcohol, and raising the drinking age back up
to 20 (it was lowered from 21 to 20 in 1967, then to 18 in
1999) - the government’s intended response is unclear.
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator is policy
analyst David Seymour, an expatriate New Zealander based in
Canada
, who believes an excessive use of alcohol by young people is
a symptom of a far wider problem:
“The question at the heart of the
youth alcohol abuse debate should be why so many youth have
decided that such a destructive activity is worth giving up
their other opportunities. Most of the popular explanations
are variations on the theme that alcohol has become more
seductive. The lowered purchase age and more outlets have made
it more available; the synthesis of alcopop drinks has made it
more digestible, advertising has made it more desirable. The
logical conclusion is that if only these could be reversed,
youth would switch back to safer, more productive activities.
“Or
perhaps the root of our troubles is that other opportunities
have become less meaningful for youth. Over the past decade,
their efforts and choices in education, the housing market,
and the economy have been trivialised, meaning they have less
to lose by getting sloshed.”
He
concludes by saying “Even ignoring the impracticality of
taking alcohol away from the young, doing so would leave a
much more serious problem untouched in our society. The only
real long-term solution to youth alcohol abuse is to attack
its root cause; the diminishing ability of youth to make a
difference in their own lives.” To read David’s full
article, Youth Alcohol Abuse is the Symptom of a Wider Disease, click
here >>>
David’s
article raises not only the wider issue of intergenerational
equity, whereby the younger generation are expected to carry
the cost burden of long term public policy decisions on
welfare, health, superannuation and so on, but also the wisdom
of short term policies that adversely impact youth
opportunities - such as Sue Bradford’s abolition of the
youth wage.
However,
the real question - given that concerns about the behaviour of
young people, is neither isolated nor new - is whether
anything can realistically be done? Clearly the politicians,
whose stock and trade is to be seen to be solving problems (rather than actually solving them!)
like to think so – and it is definitely in their interest to
create alarm even if it is not justified. But as tragic as it
may be that the consequences of irresponsible youth can lead
to disastrous results, the question remains as to whether or
not this is a problem that can be solved.
This
week’s poll asks: Do
you believe the “problem” of rebellious youth is any worse
now than when you were young? To
vote click here >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Ministry of Justice, Young
People and Alcohol
2.Ministry Transport, Young
Drivers – crash statistics
3.OECD, Doing
Better for Children
4.Ministry of Health, Suicide
Facts
5.Ministry of Transport, Safer
Journeys
6.Min
Just, Child
and Youth Offending Statistics
7.Herald, Youth
facility just gateway to jail
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send to friend
Your
Comments:
Reader's
comments will be posted on the NZCPR Forum page click
to view >>>
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send
to a friend:
|