The following is an assortment of statistics. I'll stop short of calling them facts. You will see why.
* According to the latest Household Incomes in New Zealand report the full-time employment rate for sole parents was 35% in 2009.
* According to the OECD the employment rate for sole parents was around 52 percent in 2009
* According to the Household Labour Force Survey, in 2009 the average employment rate for a sole parent with dependent children only was 52.5 percent.
* According to Ministry of Social Development Benefit Factsheets during 2009 only 15.3 percent of people on the DPB had declared earnings (indicating they worked for all or some of the year).
* According to the Household Incomes in New Zealand report 73% of sole parents were in receipt of a main benefit in 2009.
* At March 2009 there were 105,448 single parents on a main benefit (OIA request)
So that means there were around 144,500 single parents.
52 percent were working; 73 percent were on a benefit and 11 percent were officially doing both. Which leaves 10 percent unofficially doing both by my calculations.
(The only information I don't have is how many sole parents on benefits other than the DPB had declared earnings. At best that might add another percentage point onto the officially doing both portion).
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