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755. Children Below Poverty Level by Race and Hispanic Origin

[Persons as of March of the following year. Covers only related childrenin families under 18 years old]

 
Number of children Number below poverty level Percent below poverty level
(1,000) (1,000)
Year All His- All His- All His- Year
races1 White Black panic2 races1 White Black panic2 races1 White Black panic2
 
1959 63,995 (NA) (NA) (NA) 17,208 11,386 (NA) (NA) 26.9 20.6 (NA) (NA) 1959
1960 65,275 (NA) (NA) (NA) 17,288 11,229 (NA) (NA) 26.5 20.0 (NA) (NA) 1960
1961 65,792 (NA) (NA) (NA) 16,577 (NA) (NA) (NA) 25.2 (NA) (NA) (NA) 1961
1962 67,385 (NA) (NA) (NA) 16,630 (NA) (NA) (NA) 24.7 (NA) (NA) (NA) 1962
1963 68,837 (NA) (NA) (NA) 15,691 (NA) (NA) (NA) 22.8 (NA) (NA) (NA) 1963
1964 69,364 (NA) (NA) (NA) 15,736 (NA) (NA) (NA) 22.7 (NA) (NA) (NA) 1964
1965 69,638 (NA) (NA) (NA) 14,388 8,595 5,022 (NA) 20.7 14.4 65.6 (NA) 1965
1966 69,869 (NA) (NA) (NA) 12,146 7,204 4,774 (NA) 17.4 12.1 50.6 (NA) 1966
1967 70,058 (NA) (NA) (NA) 11,427 6,729 4,558 (NA) 16.3 11.3 47.4 (NA) 1967
1968 70,035 (NA) (NA) (NA) 10,739 6,373 4,188 (NA) 15.3 10.7 43.1 (NA) 1968
1969 68,746 58,578 9,290 (NA) 9,501 5,667 3,677 (NA) 13.8 9.7 39.6 (NA) 1969
1970 68,815 58,472 9,448 (NA) 10,235 6,138 3,922 (NA) 14.9 10.5 41.5 (NA) 1970
1971 68,474 58,119 9,414 (NA) 10,344 6,341 3,836 (NA) 15.1 10.9 40.4 (NA) 1971
1972 67,592 57,181 9,426 (NA) 10,082 5,784 4,025 (NA) 14.9 10.1 42.7 (NA) 1972
1973 66,626 56,211 9,405 4,910 9,453 5,462 3,822 1,364 14.2 9.7 40.6 27.8 1973
1974 65,802 55,320 9,384 4,939 9,967 6,079 3,713 1,414 15.1 11.0 39.6 28.6 1974
1975 64,750 54,126 9,374 4,896 10,882 6,748 3,884 1,619 16.8 12.5 41.4 33.1 1975
1976 63,729 53,167 9,291 4,736 10,081 6,034 3,758 1,424 15.8 11.3 40.4 30.1 1976
1977 62,823 52,299 9,253 5,000 10,028 5,943 3,850 1,402 16.0 11.4 41.6 28.0 1977
1978 61,987 51,409 9,168 4,972 9,722 5,674 3,781 1,354 15.7 11.0 41.2 27.2 1978
1979 62,646 51,687 9,172 5,426 9,993 5,909 3,745 1,505 16.0 11.4 40.8 27.7 1979
1980 62,168 51,002 9,287 5,211 11,114 6,817 3,906 1,718 17.9 13.4 42.1 33.0 1980
1981 61,756 50,553 9,291 5,291 12,068 7,429 4,170 1,874 19.5 14.7 44.9 35.4 1981
1982 61,565 50,305 9,269 5,436 13,139 8,282 4,388 2,117 21.3 16.5 47.3 38.9 1982
1983 3 61,578 50,183 9,245 5,977 13,427 8,534 4,273 2,251 21.8 17.0 46.2 37.7 1983 3
1984 61,681 50,192 9,356 5,982 12,929 8,086 4,320 2,317 21.0 16.1 46.2 38.7 1984
1985 62,019 50,358 9,405 6,346 12,483 7,838 4,057 2,512 20.1 15.6 43.1 39.6 1985
1986 62,009 50,356 9,467 6,511 12,257 7,714 4,037 2,413 19.8 15.3 42.7 37.1 1986
1987 4 62,423 50,360 9,546 6,692 12,275 7,398 4,234 2,606 19.7 14.7 44.4 38.9 1987 4
1988 62,906 50,590 9,681 6,908 11,935 7,095 4,148 2,576 19.0 14.0 42.8 37.3 1988
1989 63,225 50,704 9,847 7,040 12,001 7,164 4,257 2,496 19.0 14.1 43.2 35.5 1989
1990 63,908 51,028 9,980 7,300 12,715 7,696 4,412 2,750 19.9 15.1 44.2 37.7 1990
1991 64,800 51,627 10,178 7,473 13,658 8,316 4,637 2,977 21.1 16.1 45.6 39.8 1991
1992 65,691 52,122 10,471 7,589 13,876 8,333 4,850 2,946 21.1 16.0 46.3 38.8 1992
1992 5 67,256 53,110 10,823 8,829 14,521 8,752 5,015 3,440 21.6 16.5 46.3 39.0 1992 5
1993 68,040 53,614 10,969 9,188 14,961 9,123 5,030 3,666 22.0 17.0 45.9 39.9 1993
1994 68,819 54,221 11,044 9,621 14,610 8,826 4,787 3,956 21.2 16.3 43.3 41.1 1994
1995 69,425 54,532 11,198 10,011 13,999 8,474 4,644 3,938 20.2 15.5 41.5 39.3 1995
1996 69,411 54,599 11,155 10,255 13,764 8,488 4,411 4,090 19.8 15.5 39.5 39.9 1996
1997 69,844 54,870 11,193 10,625 13,422 8,441 4,116 3,865 19.2 15.4 36.8 36.4 1997
1998 70,253 55,126 11,176 10,921 12,845 7,935 4,073 3,670 18.3 14.4 36.4 33.6 1998
1999 70,480 55,274 11,132 11,300 11,510 7,123 3,644 3,382 16.3 12.9 32.7 29.9 1999


NA Not available.
1 Includes other races not shown separately.
2 Persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.
3 Beginning 1983, data based on revised Hispanic population controls andnot directly comparable with prior years.
4 Beginning 1987, data based on revised processing procedures and notdirectly comparable with prior years.
5 Beginning 1992, based on 1990 population controls.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Reports, Poverty in the United States,P60-210.

http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty.html

*CURRENT POPULATION SURVEY (MARCH ANNUAL DEMOGRAPHIC SURVEY)

Approximately 62,500 housing units were eligible to receive the 1995 Annual Demographic Survey. The basic monthly CPSsample of 60,000 housing units was supplemented by 2,500 housing units which had at least one Hispanic member theprevious November. In addition, members of the Armed Forces, which are excluded from the basic CPS labor force survey,were part of the elibigle population in March. Because of the CPS sample rotation system, approximately one-half of thesample had been interviewed the previous March.

Interviewers used lap-top computers to administer the interview, asking questions as they appear on the screen and directlyentering the responses obtained. With the exception of first and the fifth month-in-sample interviews, when an interviewerusually visited the sample unit, over 90 percent of the interviews were conducted by telephone.

Completed interviews were electronically transmitted to a central processor where the responses were edited for consistency,imputations were made for missing data, and various codes were added. Based on the probability of selection, a weight wasadded to each supplement-responding household and person record so that estimates of the population by state, race, age,sex, and Hispanic origin matched the population projections made by the Bureau of the Census. Since not every person whoprovided labor force information completed the supplement and the supplement was asked of members of the Armed Forces,the supplement weights vary from those used for labor force estimation.

*DEFINITIONS

Poverty definition

Poverty statistics presented in this report are based on adefinition developed by Mollie Orshansky of the Social SecurityAdministration (SSA) in 1964 and revised in 1969 and 1981 byinteragency committees. This definition was established as theofficial definition of poverty for statistical use in allExecutive departments by the Bureau of the Budget (BoB) in 1969(IN CIRCULAR NO. A-46); after BoB became Office of Managementand Budget, this was reconfirmed in Statistical Policy DirectiveNo. 14.

The original poverty index provided a range of income cutoffs orthresholds adjusted by such factors as family size, sex of thefamily head, number of children under 18 years old, and farm-nonfarm residence. At the core of this definition of poverty wasthe economy food plan, the least costly of four nutritionallyadequate food plans designed by the Department of Agriculture. It was determined from the Department of Agriculture's 1955Household Food Consumption Survey that families of three or morepersons spent approximately one-third of their after-tax moneyincome on food; accordingly, poverty thresholds for families ofthree or more persons were set at three times the cost of theeconomy food plan. Different procedures were used to calculatepoverty thresholds for two-person families and persons livingalone in order to compensate for the relatively larger fixedexpenses of these smaller units. For two-person families, thecost of the economy food plan was multiplied by a factor of 3.7(also derived from the 1955 survey). For unrelated individuals(one-person units), no multiplier was used; poverty thresholdswere instead calculated as a fixed proportion of thecorresponding thresholds for two-person units. Annual updates ofthese SSA poverty thresholds were based on price changes of theitems in the economy food plan.

As a result of deliberations of a Federal interagency committeein 1969, the following two modifications to the original SSAdefinition of poverty were adopted: (1) the SSA thresholds fornonfarm families were retained for the base year 1963, but annualadjustments in the levels were based on changes in the ConsumerPrice Index (CPI) rather than on changes in the cost of foods inthe economy food plan; and (2) the farm thresholds were raisedfrom 70 to 85 percent of the corresponding nonfarm levels. Thecombined impact of these two modifications resulted in anincrease in the tabulated totals for 1967 of 360,000 poorfamilies and 1.6 million poor persons.

In 1981 three additional modifications in the poverty definitionrecommended by another interagency committee were adopted forimplementation in the March 1982 CPS as well as the 1980 census:(1) elimination of separate thresholds for farm families, (2)elimination (by averaging) of separate thresholds for female-householder families and "all other" families (earlier termed"male-headed" families) and (3) extension of the detailed povertythreshold matrix to make the largest family size category "ninepersons or more." For further details, see the section, "Changesin the Definition of Poverty," in Current Population Reports,Series P-60, No. 133.

The poverty thresholds are increased each year by the samepercentage as the annual average Consumer Price Index.

For further information on how the poverty thresholds weredeveloped and subsequent changes in them, see Gordon M. Fisher,"The Development and History of the Poverty Thresholds," SocialSecurity Bulletin, Vol. 55 No. 4, Winter 1992, pp. 3-14.

*

https://allcountries.org/uscensus/755_children_below_poverty_level_by_race.html

These tables are based on figures supplied by the United States Census Bureau, U.S. Department of Commerce and are subject to revision by the Census Bureau.

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