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What Explains the Recent Rise in Rural Child Poverty?


Published:
May 26, 2016
Two young boys enjoying lunch near their home in Knox County, Ky
Young children at lunch in Kentucky. Rising income inequality in rural areas over the past decade has coincided with an increase in child poverty, according to a recent report by USDA’s Economic Research Service. USDA photo

During the 1950s and 1960s, the adage “a rising tide lifts all boats” broadly applied to the U.S. economy. As average income grew, the share of the population living in poverty fell rapidly. In the 1970s and 1980s, however, this relationship changed: average income continued to rise, but poverty increased. This means that incomes actually fell for many families in the lower portion of the income distribution. In other words, income inequality increased, and this translated into higher poverty despite a growing economy.

Recent work by USDA’s Economic Research Service (ERS) shows that this dynamic persists, and helps explain trends in poverty among children in rural areas. According to official estimates, the share of rural children living in poverty grew between 2003 and 2007 even as the national economy expanded. Between 2007 and 2010, this share continued to increase, as might be expected given the profound economic recession of 2007-09. But the rural child poverty rate continued to rise through 2012, peaking at 26.7 percent, its highest level since at least 1968 -- despite the resumption of economic growth at the national level. The rate finally began to decline between 2012 and 2014, but the 2014 level was well above that of 2003.

What explains the persistence of elevated rates of rural child poverty? We found that incomes for all rural families with children were, adjusted for inflation, about the same on average in 2014 as in 2003, but rural child poverty was 3.4 percentage points higher. This implies that many lower income rural families have been left behind by the national economic recovery. In fact, the average income of the poorest one-quarter of rural families with children was 13 percent lower in 2014, adjusted for inflation, than it had been in 2003. We calculated that if these lower-income families had experienced the same rate of income growth as did other rural families, then rural child poverty would have been nearly constant -- increasing by only 0.2 percentage points -- instead of increasing by 3.4 points.

The issue of rising income inequality is often framed as a matter of the top one percent pulling away from the rest, and some commentators ask why the rest should be concerned about this growing gap, so long as their standards of living are not falling. But in many rural areas, over the past decade, rising inequality has coincided with a falling standard of living for lower income families, and an increase in child poverty.

A recent ERS report and an article in the agency’s Amber Waves magazine provide further details on what contributed to rural child poverty.

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