Census: New gauge shows 49.7 million poor in U.S.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The ranks of America's poor edged up last year to a high of 49.7 million, based on a new census measure that takes into account medical costs and work-related expenses.
The numbers released Wednesday by the Census Bureau are part of a newly developed supplemental poverty measure. Devised a year ago, this measure provides a fuller picture of poverty that the government believes can be used to assess safety-net programs by factoring in living expenses and taxpayer-provided benefits that the official formula leaves out.
Based on the revised formula, the number of poor people exceeded the 49 million, or 16 percent of the population, who were living below the poverty line in 2010. That came as more people in the slowly improving economy picked up low-wage jobs last year but still struggled to pay living expenses. The revised poverty rate of 16.1 percent also is higher than the record 46.2 million, or 15 percent, that the government's official estimate reported in September.
Due to medical expenses, higher living costs and limited immigrant access to government programs, people 65 or older, Hispanics and urbanites were more likely to be struggling economically under the alternative formula. Also spiking higher in 2011 was poverty among full-time and part-time workers.
As a result, the portrait of poverty broken down by state notably changes. California tops the list, hurt by high housing costs, large numbers of immigrants as well as less generous tax credits and food stamp programs to buoy low-income families. It is followed by the District of Columbia, Arizona, Florida and Georgia.
In the official census tally, it was rural states that were more likely to be near the top of the list, led by Mississippi, New Mexico, Arizona and Louisiana.
"We're seeing a very slow recovery, with increases in poverty among workers due to more new jobs which are low-wage," said Timothy Smeeding, a University of Wisconsin-Madison economist who specializes in poverty. "As a whole, the safety net is holding many people up, while California is struggling more because it's relatively harder there to qualify for food stamps and other benefits."
Broken down by group, poverty was disproportionately affecting people 65 and older - about 15.1 percent, or nearly double the 8.7 percent rate calculated under the official formula. They also have higher medical expenses, such as Medicare premiums, deductibles and drug costs, that aren't factored into the official rate.
Working-age adults ages 18-64 saw an increase in poverty from 13.7 percent to 15.5 percent, due mostly to commuting and child care costs.
In contrast, the new measure showed declines in poverty for children, from 22.3 percent under the official formula to 18.1 percent. Still, they remained the age group most likely to be economically struggling by any measure.
Hispanics and Asians also saw much higher rates of poverty, 28 percent and 16.9 percent, respectively, compared with rates of 25.4 percent and 12.3 percent under the official formula. Their poverty levels rose after the government took into account safety-net programs such as food stamps and housing, which have lower participation among immigrants and non-English speakers.
In contrast, African-Americans saw a modest decrease in poverty, from 27.8 percent under the official rate to 25.7 percent based on the revised numbers. Among non-Hispanic whites, poverty rose from 9.9 percent to 11 percent.
Economists long have criticized the official poverty rate as inadequate. Based on a half-century-old government formula, the official rate continues to assume the average family spends one-third of its income on food. Those costs have actually shrunk to a much smaller share, more like one-seventh.
The official formula also fails to account for other expenses such as out-of-pocket medical care, child care and commuting, and it does not consider noncash government aid, such as food stamps and tax credits, when calculating income.
In reaction to some of the criticism, the government in 2010 asked the Census Bureau to develop a new measure, based partly on recommendations made by the National Academy of Sciences. It released national numbers based on that formula for the first time last year. This year's release features a 50-state breakdown on poverty, prompted in part by local officials such as New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg who have argued that the official measure does not take into account urban costs of living and that larger cities may get less federal money as a result.
The goal is to help lawmakers to better gauge the effectiveness of anti-poverty programs, although it does not replace the Census Bureau's official poverty formula.
Among the findings:
-If it weren't for Social Security payments, the poverty rate would rise to 54.1 percent for people 65 and older and 24.4 percent for all age groups.
-Without refundable tax credits such as the earned income tax credit, child poverty would rise from 18.1 percent to 24.4 percent.
-Without food stamps, the overall poverty rate would increase from 16.1 percent to 17.6 percent.
"These figures are timely given the looming expiration of two key measures that account for part of these programs' large antipoverty impact: federal emergency unemployment insurance and improvements in refundable tax credits" such as the Earned Income Tax Credit, said Arloc Sherman, a senior researcher at the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal-leaning think-tank. "Letting these measures expire at year's end could push large numbers of families into poverty."
The numbers released Wednesday by the Census Bureau are part of a newly developed supplemental poverty measure. Devised a year ago, this measure provides a fuller picture of poverty that the government believes can be used to assess safety-net programs by factoring in living expenses and taxpayer-provided benefits that the official formula leaves out.
Based on the revised formula, the number of poor people exceeded the 49 million, or 16 percent of the population, who were living below the poverty line in 2010. That came as more people in the slowly improving economy picked up low-wage jobs last year but still struggled to pay living expenses. The revised poverty rate of 16.1 percent also is higher than the record 46.2 million, or 15 percent, that the government's official estimate reported in September.
Due to medical expenses, higher living costs and limited immigrant access to government programs, people 65 or older, Hispanics and urbanites were more likely to be struggling economically under the alternative formula. Also spiking higher in 2011 was poverty among full-time and part-time workers.
As a result, the portrait of poverty broken down by state notably changes. California tops the list, hurt by high housing costs, large numbers of immigrants as well as less generous tax credits and food stamp programs to buoy low-income families. It is followed by the District of Columbia, Arizona, Florida and Georgia.
In the official census tally, it was rural states that were more likely to be near the top of the list, led by Mississippi, New Mexico, Arizona and Louisiana.
"We're seeing a very slow recovery, with increases in poverty among workers due to more new jobs which are low-wage," said Timothy Smeeding, a University of Wisconsin-Madison economist who specializes in poverty. "As a whole, the safety net is holding many people up, while California is struggling more because it's relatively harder there to qualify for food stamps and other benefits."
Broken down by group, poverty was disproportionately affecting people 65 and older - about 15.1 percent, or nearly double the 8.7 percent rate calculated under the official formula. They also have higher medical expenses, such as Medicare premiums, deductibles and drug costs, that aren't factored into the official rate.
Working-age adults ages 18-64 saw an increase in poverty from 13.7 percent to 15.5 percent, due mostly to commuting and child care costs.
In contrast, the new measure showed declines in poverty for children, from 22.3 percent under the official formula to 18.1 percent. Still, they remained the age group most likely to be economically struggling by any measure.
Hispanics and Asians also saw much higher rates of poverty, 28 percent and 16.9 percent, respectively, compared with rates of 25.4 percent and 12.3 percent under the official formula. Their poverty levels rose after the government took into account safety-net programs such as food stamps and housing, which have lower participation among immigrants and non-English speakers.
In contrast, African-Americans saw a modest decrease in poverty, from 27.8 percent under the official rate to 25.7 percent based on the revised numbers. Among non-Hispanic whites, poverty rose from 9.9 percent to 11 percent.
Economists long have criticized the official poverty rate as inadequate. Based on a half-century-old government formula, the official rate continues to assume the average family spends one-third of its income on food. Those costs have actually shrunk to a much smaller share, more like one-seventh.
The official formula also fails to account for other expenses such as out-of-pocket medical care, child care and commuting, and it does not consider noncash government aid, such as food stamps and tax credits, when calculating income.
In reaction to some of the criticism, the government in 2010 asked the Census Bureau to develop a new measure, based partly on recommendations made by the National Academy of Sciences. It released national numbers based on that formula for the first time last year. This year's release features a 50-state breakdown on poverty, prompted in part by local officials such as New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg who have argued that the official measure does not take into account urban costs of living and that larger cities may get less federal money as a result.
The goal is to help lawmakers to better gauge the effectiveness of anti-poverty programs, although it does not replace the Census Bureau's official poverty formula.
Among the findings:
-If it weren't for Social Security payments, the poverty rate would rise to 54.1 percent for people 65 and older and 24.4 percent for all age groups.
-Without refundable tax credits such as the earned income tax credit, child poverty would rise from 18.1 percent to 24.4 percent.
-Without food stamps, the overall poverty rate would increase from 16.1 percent to 17.6 percent.
"These figures are timely given the looming expiration of two key measures that account for part of these programs' large antipoverty impact: federal emergency unemployment insurance and improvements in refundable tax credits" such as the Earned Income Tax Credit, said Arloc Sherman, a senior researcher at the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal-leaning think-tank. "Letting these measures expire at year's end could push large numbers of families into poverty."
Just fear mongoring. Obama said we have nothing to worry about. He's going to give us the rich people's money. Let's see ... that should last about a week.
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Hey - does anyone know if Obama is going to give any of the poor people some of the millions of dollars he made the past two years off his books? What an insulting question. I'm sure he already has.
These days more are paying over half their take home pay for rent , A $10per hour job brings home about $1200 or so after taxes. Typical rent herein the Seattle metro area for a one bedroom apartment is $900. That does not leave much for food gas and utilities. Likely a second job or a roomate is needed just to keep a roof over your head at minimum wage.
Yea I called it !! Hundreds of millions of dollars going into the Census Bureau- Â a massive agency with do-nothing socialists with statistical degrees- wanting to redistribute wealth.Â
With the price of the basic needs such as gas, food, school, shelter, healthcare going up, we will see more and more Americans living in poverty.
The Census Bureau is working in cohutz with other government agencies to redistribute wealth. Â That is why they have these so called "official" statistics. Â The hundreds of millions going into these statistics should stay in the hands of the taxpayers. Â All it is anyway is an estimate that is way off, Â as America slides further into poverty because of government policies.Â
Not surprising. The current administration wants as many people on the gov't teat so that the move towards ("Forward") socialism is as seamless as it can possibly be. Maybe the petition to seccede from the union has some substance. Checkout all the other states that have file similar petitions at wethepeople.com
Sorry, here's the correct website https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/
It is going to get worse next year with all the companies either closing offices, shutting down, and laying off workers.
America is about winners and losers, but if you do not believe me ask the Republicans and FOX News
@Dozen 123 Tell us about it. We had to listen to the Democrats and MSNBC for 8-years.
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BUT - one difference. That President never encouraged class and gender warfare. Division.
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What's it matter. This President said we just need to believe in hope and change becasue its moving forward with or without us.
I am voting to redistribute Congress's combined wealth.... Next up the rest of the Three Branches of Oligarchy combined wealth.... then we will see about the rest.
America's Three Branches of Oligarchy brought Americans to this point. The inaction of Congress had a price war(s) without end, increased size 3 fold pertaining to Homeland Security and continues to claim zero responsibility by reducing their pay, benefits and size. Rather our government continues to attack the middle-class and poor to further fund their collective insanity. Their combined idea of government reduction was to attack state workers and others that were already struggling with today's economy. The Three Branches of Oligarchy must give concessions or the people will force the issue in the end.
no wonder the candidate who promised handouts won.
I'm sure the stats are off just as all government stats are. There's 47 million people alone who are on food stamps. Then you have the working poor. I imagine the real number is probably closer to 70 million people in Amerika living in poverty. Just the continuing destructive force of unregulated capitalism. As the wealth continues to get concentrated to fewer and fewer people the rest get poor. Things will be better once our economy collapses. Then salaries will go back to $2 an hour and corporations will start coming in to capitalize on the cheap 3rd world labor and suck people back into debt again. Nothing like having workers in debt to make the perfect slaves.
 @Blindman Bartering sounds pretty good to me...... I will trade you a jar of jelly for some bread... etc.!
America's economy is collapsing as she has jettisoned her strength through independence and has bound herself to a failed global economy. Our government leaders no longer adhere to a concept of obeying the spirit of the law, let alone the letter of the law. Most of them have no concept of right and wrong. No concept of what is and is not appropriate. And perhaps no conscience. These politicians have no respect for the people who elected them. No respect for the American people. No respect for their office. No respect for the Constitution of the United States. No respect for what it means to be entrusted by the people of this nation to serve at the highest capacity. Their only goal is to consolidate more money and power into the hands of the few in order to control and manipulate the many. (author unknown)
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"A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and he carries his banners openly. But the traitor moves among those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not traitor, he speaks in the accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their garments, and he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of a city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to be feared." - Cicero, 42 B.C.
There will be millions more before the poor and what was the middle class get done transferring whats left of their wealth up to the criminals that caused this crisis. Funny, they send all the family wage jobs overseas, crash the economy, put millions on unemployment, then come back with jobs paying 7-13 dollars per hour and call it a recovery. Big capital made these calculated moves for a reason.Â
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I quit a job in '86 because it only paid 15.01 pr hr with pension and health care and moved on to 20.00 an hr with benefits and you guys think 13 with no pension or health care is great. lol glad I am retired and you should also know the guys that came before me would of had a general strike in this country long before any of this "crisis" got started. This aint China and you guys need to get in the street and not do a damned thing till you get US area standards returned to you. If you're too much of a girly man to stand for yourselves, do it for your kids because they are toast under this scam and will starve. Good Luck.Â
America knows no poor! Go visit some place like the congo or Libria! were people are dying from lack of food and sewage for drinking water. Here In America our poor get free cell phones free housing free food stamps free medical free transportation. Free or reduced cable TV. Hell I want to be poor In America!
 @wynooheeman I heard the ad on the radio while driving to work that poor people can get a cell phone with 250 (I think) monthly minutes and some texting, all FREE. We live in one crazy entitlement based nation. What next? Free new cars? Free jewelry?
yes.
@wynooheeman Agree, much better being poor in the US than middle class in many countries.
 @Damian Enjoy how things are now.... You're right it's all cake right now..... Next year is the beginning of feeling the effects from a bad economy.
 @wynooheeman You will be.
But worry not, Barak is here to rob those evil rich & redistribute to all the have-nots.
@Controlled-Insanity You think he will give us some of his millions too, right? I'm sure he will - he doesn't lie. Not the annoited one.
 @Controlled-Insanity Really? 39% of middleclass wealth has been transferred up in the last 3 years and wages have gone down 8.2% since 2007.  In contrast, the rich have increased their wealth by 46%. What have you been smoking? Barack is a corporatist and will continue to bail out the bankers and wall street all the while you spout that crap.
Actually, you are correct. Wall Street has had a boner for Barack the last four yrs.  Welfare in this country is just Corporate America / The Federal Gov. giving the poor money to buy their products with taxpayer money. It's a great scam and it works well.
"Census: New gauge shows 49.7 million poor in U.S."
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...and that's just the middle class...