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Past Event

A Look at the New Census Data and What the Numbers Mean for Children and Families

Poverty and Income in 2002

U.S. Poverty, Welfare, Community Development, Demographics, Children & Families

Event Summary

The Census Bureau will release new data on poverty and income for 2002 on September 26. Based on figures from the Census Bureau's American Community Survey, released earlier this month, it is widely expected that the 2002 data will reveal some increase in poverty. The Census Bureau will also release its data on family income in 2002. Together, this information will allow for a more detailed analysis of how children and families are faring in an uncertain economy.

Event Information

When

Friday, September 26, 2003
2:00 PM to 3:30 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20036
Directions

Contact: Office of Communications

E-mail: communications@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On the day the numbers are released, the Brookings Welfare Reform & Beyond initiative will hold a briefing for press and members of the public to discuss the new figures and their implications for families and policymakers. A panel of experts with a broad range of opinions will offer their reactions to the report as well as their perspectives on the significance of the new data. Panelists will also address larger questions prompted by the numbers, including how much poverty and income changed in 2002, whether the extent of the change is surprising given the economy, and how various population groups and types of families are faring.


Hear NPR's coverage of the WR&B event, Poverty and Income in 2002, "Downturn Gentler Than Feared for Working Moms, Kids"

Transcript

MR. GARY BURTLESS: As you would expect, if you pay any attention to the business section of the nation's newspapers, a recession is not a very helpful climate to see family incomes improve. The Census reports issued today show that median household income fell about 1.1 percent between 2001 and 2002, and the median income of family households in the United States fell about almost 1 percent. The worst statistic and probably in some ways the most surprising statistic was that per capita personal income in the United States fell 1.8 percent last year, compared with the previous year.

Now, not surprisingly, these declines in income produce an increase in the overall poverty rate for the United States. Poverty rose .4 of a percentage point to 12.1 percent, and that rise was about the same in every age group. It was about the same for the young and for the 18-64 year-olds and for the aged. Now, this is certainly bad news. There's no way to put a nice spin on it; it's bad news. But it's hardly unexpected, given what we already know about what's happening in the nation's labor markets.

The good news is that the median incomes and incomes at the bottom have held up much better in the last recession than they did in the previous three. One indicator is the poverty-rate change in the first two years after the peak of an economic expansion. Among children, between 1973 and '75, in that recession, the poverty rate was 2.7 percent. In the first two years after 1979, the child poverty rate rose 3.4 percentage points. And in the most recent recession before this one, the child poverty rate was 2.2 percentage points.

So far in this recession, according to these statistics, the child poverty rate has only risen one-half of a percentage point. And this number is mirrored if you look at the people of prime age, people 18 years old to 64 years old. It's the same pattern--the rise in the poverty rate has been much more modest in this recession than it was in the previous two.

Read the event transcript. (PDF—86KB)

Participants

Moderators

Ron Haskins

Senior Fellow, Economic Studies

Panelists

Gary Burtless

Senior Fellow, Economic Studies

Kay Hymowitz

Senior Fellow, the Manhattan Institute

Robert Greenstein

Executive Director, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

Robert Rector

Senior Research Fellow, Domestic Policy Studies, The Heritage Foundation

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