
From child labour to plastic waste: twin crises reveal deepening poverty and policy failures
Across Iran and Ghana, economic hardship and weak governance are driving children into work and turning plastic pollution into a public health and environmental emergency.
The deepening of poverty in Iran and the persistence of child labour in Ghana are twin symptoms of a global failure to protect the most vulnerable, even as environmental crises from plastic waste compound the damage. In Iran, the head of the country’s social workers’ association has warned that poverty is becoming more entrenched, with children increasingly visible on streets and at traffic intersections as families struggle to survive. The phenomenon, he argues, is a direct consequence of economic deterioration: as household incomes shrink, more children are pushed into work, deprived of education and exposed to physical and psychological harm. The warning echoes data from Ghana, where the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice has revealed that more than 458,000 children engaged in economic activities are out of school, out of a total of 1.1 million working children aged five to seventeen. Viewed from Accra, the figures underscore a systemic failure to enforce child protection laws and international commitments, even as the country marks the World Day Against Child Labour.
Parallel to the human cost of poverty, Ghana is grappling with an environmental and economic crisis driven by plastic waste. A study by the Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research estimates that poor waste management costs the country over 6.2 billion cedis annually in health-related losses. Yet some entrepreneurs see opportunity: a plastic waste trader known as PlasticPreneur argues that plastic should be viewed as a resource, not trash, and that proper recovery and recycling systems could create jobs and livelihoods. This perspective, however, clashes with the reality that much of Ghana’s plastic ends up in waterways and oceans. The founder of the Ocean Harmony Project warns that plastics are entering the human food chain through fish, posing a direct threat to public health. Meanwhile, young climate advocates link the proliferation of single-use plastics to worsening floods in communities like Aboabo, where plastic waste clogs drains and turns manageable rainfall into disasters. They argue that Ghana’s floods are not natural but behavioural, driven by poor waste disposal and weak environmental consciousness.
A similar disconnect between policy and practice is evident in Australia, where the Australian Capital Territory requires all packaging at public events to be compostable or recyclable. Yet most of this packaging ends up in landfill because no facility exists to compost it. Waterproof and non-stick coatings on many compostable products further complicate the issue, rendering them unsuitable for industrial composting. The situation highlights a broader pattern: well-intentioned regulations often fail without the necessary infrastructure, turning symbolic gestures into exercises in futility. From Tehran to Accra to Canberra, the common thread is a gap between aspiration and implementation, compounded by economic pressures that push both people and the environment to the brink. As poverty deepens and waste mounts, the need for integrated solutions that address root causes—rather than symptoms—has never been more urgent.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
The article denounces the deepening poverty in Iran and its impact on child laborers, emphasizing that the phenomenon is growing despite official denials. The tone is critical of authorities' inaction and highlights the suffering of children deprived of education and protection. The narrative stresses the urgency of social intervention.
Ghanaian coverage links child labor to poverty and poor waste management, but also offers entrepreneurial solutions and advocacy. It denounces that over 458,000 children are out of school due to labor, yet highlights initiatives to turn waste into resources. The tone is concerned but constructive, with a focus on data and proposals.
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