Cash nautica teen
Kids & cash: what we spend on children says a lot about American priorities
Twice as much is spent on marketing to kids than in 1992.
In 2000, American parents named 353 newborns "Lexus," 164 "Nautica," 21 "L'Oreal," 7 "Courvoisier," and 1 "Xerox."
30% of all children under the age of three have a TV in their bedroom.
In 48 states, daycare for a four-year-old costs more than tuition at a four-year public college.
Only 49% of child support is ever collected.
Until it went bankrupt, FAO Schwartz sold a functioning kid's ATM for $20,000.
2 in 3 parents think their kids define their self-worth by their possessions.
Posh Tots will provide children with an exact replica of their parents' home for $40,000 or less.
For Christmas last year, Mattel made seven Barbies with a shopping theme, including Let's Grocery Shop! Barbie.
13 million children live in households suffering from hunger or food insecurity.
In 2003, Coca-Cola gave a million-dollar grant to the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry.
In August, the American Academy of Pediatrics suggested that, due to rising obesity rates, doctors check the blood pressure of kids three and up.
To pay for a 10-year-old's college education, parents will need to save $82,000 for in-state public college, $176,000 for private college.
The average public school teacher spends $521 of their own money to buy supplies for their students.
Bush's No Child Left Behind initiative has been "authorized" for $17.2 billion more than it has actually received.
3/4 of public schools are in need of repairs, renovations, and modernization.
Hillsborough, Fla., public schools got $50 million for agreeing to only sell Pepsi Co. products.
70% of public schools participate in a "business relationship" with corporations.
A child's "pimp daddy" costume from brandsonsale.com costs $57.95.
40% of the homeless are families with children.
89% of uninsured children are children of color.
63% of white think that black and white children get equal educational opportunities. Only 31% of blacks agree.
1/3 of California public school students do not have the books necessary to do their homework.
Public schools in the wealthiest neighborhoods win state team championships at more than twice the rate of poor school districts.
Teen and "tween" boys buy more than $2.1 billion in beauty products a year.
The U.S. has twice as many shopping malls as high schools.
The average 18-year-old has seen 16,000 simulated murders and 200,000 acts of violence on TV.
On average, states spend almost three times as much per prisoner as per public school pupil.
Each week, the typical American teen consumes a full work-week's worth of commercial media.
According to Harvard's Civil Rights Project, 75% of whites, 50% of blacks, and 53% of Latinos graduate high school on time.
Burger King runs 24 "academies" for dropouts.
8 in 10 Americans say "it is very difficult for a middle-class family to afford a college education."
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COPYRIGHT 2004 Foundation for National Progress
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group