The proportion of Americans living in poverty rose
significantly last year, increasing for the first
time in eight years, the Census Bureau reported today.
At the same time, the bureau said that the income
of middle-class households fell for the first time
since the last recession ended, in 1991.
The Census Bureau's annual report on income and poverty
provided stark evidence that the weakening economy
had begun to affect large segments of the population,
regardless of race, region or class. Daniel H. Weinberg,
chief of income and poverty statistics at the Census
Bureau, said the recession that began in March 2001
had reduced the earnings of millions of Americans.
The report also suggested that the gap between rich
and poor continued to grow.
All regions except the Northeast experienced a decline
in household income, the bureau reported. For blacks,
it was the first significant decline in two decades;
non-Hispanic whites saw a slight decline. Even the
incomes of Asians and Pacific Islanders, a group that
achieved high levels of prosperity in the 1990's,
went down significantly last year.
"The decline was widespread," Mr. Weinberg
said.
The Census Bureau said the number of poor Americans
rose last year to 32.9 million, an increase of 1.3
million, while the proportion living in poverty rose
to 11.7 percent, from 11.3 percent in 2000.
Median household income fell to $42,228 in 2001, a
decline of $934 or 2.2 percent from the prior year.
The number of households with income above the median
is the same as the number below it.
A family of four was classified as poor if it had
cash income less than $18,104 last year. The official
poverty levels, updated each year to reflect changes
in the Consumer Price Index, were $14,128 for a family
of three, $11,569 for a married couple and $9,039
for an individual.
The bureau's report is likely to provide fodder for
the Congressional campaigns. The White House said
the increase in poverty resulted, in part, from an
economic slowdown that began under President Bill
Clinton. But Democrats said the data showed the failure
of President Bush's economic policies and his tendency
to neglect the economy.
Mr. Bush said today that he remained optimistic. "When
you combine the productivity of the American people
with low interest rates and low inflation, those are
the ingredients for growth," Mr. Bush said.
But Senator Paul S. Sarbanes, Democrat of Maryland,
said the administration should "start paying
attention to the economic situation." Richard
A. Gephardt of Missouri, the House Democratic leader,
expressed amazement that Mr. Bush, after being in
office for 20 months, was still blaming his predecessor.
Rudolph G. Penner, a former director of the Congressional
Budget Office, said: "The increase in poverty
is most certainly a result of the recession. The slow
recovery, the slow rate of growth, has been very disappointing.
Whether that has a political impact this fall depends
on whether the election hinges on national conditions
or focuses on local issues."
Although the poverty rate, the proportion of the population
living in poverty, rose four-tenths of a percentage
point last year, it was still lower than in most of
the last two decades. The poverty rate exceeded 12
percent every year from 1980 to 1998. As the economy
grew from 1993 to 2000, the rate plunged, to 11.3
percent from 15.1 percent, and the poverty rolls were
reduced by 7.7 million people, to 31.6 million.
The latest recession showed an unusual pattern, seeming
to raise poverty rates among whites more than among
minority groups, Mr. Weinberg said.
Increases in poverty last year were concentrated in
the suburbs, in the South and among non-Hispanic whites,
the Census Bureau said. Indeed, non-Hispanic whites
were the only racial group for whom the poverty rate
showed a significant increase, to 7.8 percent in 2001,
from 7.4 percent in 2000.
Poverty rates for minority groups were once much higher.
But last year, the bureau said, they remained "at
historic lows" for blacks (22.7 percent), Hispanics
(21.4 percent) and Asian Americans (10.2 percent).
With its usual caution, the Census Bureau said the
data did not conclusively show a year-to-year increase
in income inequality. But the numbers showed a clear
trend in that direction over the last 15 years.
The most affluent fifth of the population received
half of all household income last year, up from 45
percent in 1985. The poorest fifth received 3.5 percent
of total household income, down from 4 percent in
1985. Average income for the top 5 percent of households
rose by $1,000 last year, to $260,464, but the average
declined or stayed about the same for most other income
brackets.
Robert Greenstein, executive director of the Center
on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal research
institute, said, "The census data show that income
inequality either set a record in 2001 or tied for
the highest level on record."
Median earnings increased
3.5 percent for women last year, but did not change
for men, so women gained relative to men.
"The real median earnings of women age 15 and
older who worked full time year-round increased for
the fifth consecutive year, rising to $29,215 - a
3.5 percent increase between 2000 and 2001,"
Mr. Weinberg said. The comparable figure for men was
unchanged at $38,275. So the female-to-male earnings
ratio reached a high of 0.76. The previous high was
0.74, first recorded in 1996.
Democrats said the data supported their contention
that Congress should increase spending on social welfare
programs, resisted by many Republicans. But Wade F.
Horn,the administration's welfare director, said the
number of poor children was much lower than in 1996,
when Congress overhauled the welfare law to impose
strict work requirements.
Of the 32.9 million poor people in the United States
last year, 11.7 million were under 18, and 3.4 million
were 65 or older. Poverty rates for children, 16.3
percent, and the elderly, 10.1 percent, were virtually
unchanged from 2000. But the poverty rate for people
18 to 64 rose a half percentage point, to 10.1 percent.
Median household income for blacks fell last year
by $1,025, or 3.4 percent, to $29,470. Median income
of Hispanics, at $33,565, was virtually unchanged.
But household income fell by 1.3 percent for non-Hispanic
whites, to $46,305, and by 6.4 percent for Asian Americans,
to $53,635. The Census Bureau report also included
these findings:
There were 6.8 million poor families last year, up
from 6.4 million in 2000. The poverty rate for families
rose to 9.2 percent, from a 26-year low of 8.7 percent
in 2000.
The rate in the South rose to 13.5 percent, from 12.8
percent in 2000. The South is home to more than 40
percent of all the nation's poor, and it accounted
for more than half of the national increase in the
number of poor last year.
The poverty rate for the suburbs rose to 8.2 percent
last year, from 7.8 percent in 2000. The number of
poor people in suburban areas rose by 700,000, to
12 million. There was virtually no change in the rates
in central cities (16.5 percent) and outside metropolitan
areas (14.2 percent).
The bureau said the number of "severely poor"
rose to 13.4 million last year, from 12.6 million
in 2000. People are considered to be severely poor
if their family incomes are less than half of the
official poverty level.
September 26, 2002. [Source: The New York Times, September 25, 2002]
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