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US CENSUS BUREAU: Household Income Rises, Poverty Rate Declines, Number of Uninsured Up
[August 28, 2007]

US CENSUS BUREAU: Household Income Rises, Poverty Rate Declines, Number of Uninsured Up


(M2 PressWIRE Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge)
RDATE:28082007

Real median household income in the United States climbed between 2005
and 2006, reaching $48,200, according to a report released today by the
U.S. Census Bureau. This is the second consecutive year that income has
risen.

Meanwhile, the nation's official poverty rate declined for the first
time this decade, from 12.6 percent in 2005 to 12.3 percent in 2006.
There were 36.5 million people in poverty in 2006, not statistically
different from 2005. The number of people without health insurance
coverage rose from 44.8 million (15.3 percent) in 2005 to 47 million
(15.8 percent) in 2006.

These findings are contained in the Income, Poverty, and Health
Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2006 report [PDF]. The data
were compiled from information collected in the 2007 Current Population
Survey (CPS) Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC).

Also released today were income, poverty and earnings data from the
2006 American Community Survey (ACS) for states and metropolitan areas,
counties, cities and American Indian/Alaska Native areas of 65,000
population or more and all congressional districts. (This year marks
the first time that the population in group quarters ? such as prisons,
college dorms, military barracks and nursing homes ? is included, so
the 2006 estimates are not fully comparable to the 2005 estimates.)

Current Population Survey (Provides primarily national-level statistics)

The 2007 Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic
Supplement reveals the following results for the nation:

Income

Race and Hispanic Origin (Race data refer to people reporting a single
race only)

* Real median household income of white households rose 1.1 percent
between 2005 and 2006 (from $50,100 to $50,700), the first real
increase in annual household income for this group since 1999. Asian
households had the highest median income at $64,200, followed by
non-Hispanic white ($52,400), Hispanic ($37,800) and black ($32,000)
households. Income levels remained statistically unchanged between 2005
and 2006 for each of these groups.

Regions

* Between 2005 and 2006, real median incomes of households in the
nation's four regions were statistically unchanged.

In 2006, the Northeast and West had the highest household incomes at
$52,100 and $52,200, respectively, followed by the Midwest ($47,800)
and South ($43,900). (The apparent difference between household incomes
of the Northeast and West was not statistically significant.)

Nativity and Earnings

* Real median income rose by 1.3 percent to $49,100 in 2006 for
native-born households and was statistically unchanged for foreign-born
households ($43,900).

* In 2006, women earned 77 cents for each dollar earned by men,
statistically unchanged from 2005. Real median earnings of both men and
women who worked full time, year-round declined between 2005 and 2006.
The median earnings for men fell 1.1 percent to $42,300; for women, the
corresponding numbers were 1.2 percent and $32,500.

(The apparent difference between the decline in the earnings of men and
women was not statistically significant.)

Poverty

Overview

* About 9.8 percent (7.7 million) of the nation's families were in
poverty in 2006. Married-couple families had a poverty rate of 4.9
percent (2.9 million), compared with 28.3 percent (4.1 million) for
female-householder, no-husband-present families and 13.2 percent
(671,000) for those with a male householder and no wife present. The
poverty rate for these types of families in poverty showed no
statistically significant change between 2005 and 2006.

* As defined by the Office of Management and Budget and updated for
inflation using the Consumer Price Index, the weighted average poverty
threshold for a family of four in 2006 was $20,614; for a family of
three, $16,079; for a family of two, $13,167; and for unrelated
individuals, $10,294.

Race and Hispanic Origin (Race data refer to people reporting a single
race only)

* For Hispanics, 20.6 percent were in poverty in 2006, down from 21.8
percent in 2005. Poverty rates remained statistically unchanged for
non-Hispanic whites (8.2 percent), blacks (24.3 percent) and Asians
(10.3 percent) in 2006.

Age

* For people 65 and older, the poverty rate was lower (9.4 percent) in
2006 than in 2005 (10.1 percent). For children younger than 18 (17.4
percent) and people 18 to 64 (10.8 percent), the poverty rate remained
statistically unchanged.

* The number in poverty declined for seniors 65 and older ? from 3.6
million in 2005 to 3.4 million in 2006. For children under 18 (12.8
million) and people 18 to 64 (20.2 million), the numbers in poverty
remained statistically unchanged in 2006.

Nativity

* Among the native-born population, 11.9 percent, or 30.8 million, were
in poverty in 2006. Both the poverty rate and number in poverty were
statistically unchanged from 2005.

* Among the foreign-born population, the poverty rate decreased from
16.5 percent in 2005 to 15.2 percent in 2006. The number in poverty was
statistically unchanged at 5.7 million in 2006.

Regions

* In 2006, the South continued to have the highest poverty rate at 13.8
percent. The other three regions had poverty rates that were not
statistically different from one another: 11.5 percent in the
Northeast, 11.2 percent in the Midwest and 11.6 percent in the West.

* The West was the only region to show a statistical change in the
number and percentage in poverty: 8 million and 11.6 percent in 2006,
down from 8.6 million and 12.6 percent in 2005.

Health Insurance Coverage

Overview

* The number of uninsured children increased from 8 million (10.9
percent) in 2005 to 8.7 million (11.7 percent) in 2006.

Race and Hispanic Origin (Race data refer to those reporting a single
race only)

* The number of uninsured, as well as the rate without health
insurance, remained statistically unchanged in 2006 for non-Hispanic
whites (at 21.2 million or 10.8 percent).

For blacks, the number and percentage increased, from 7 million in 2005
to 7.6 million and from 19 percent in 2005 to 20.5 percent. The number
of uninsured Asians remained statistically unchanged, at 2 million in
2006, while their uninsured rate declined to 15.5 percent in 2006, from
17.2 percent in 2005.

* The number and percentage of uninsured Hispanics increased from 14
million (32.3 percent) in 2005 to 15.3 million (34.1 percent).

* Based on a three-year average (2004-2006), 31.4 percent of people who
reported American Indian and Alaska Native as their race were without
coverage. The three-year average for Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific
Islanders was 21.7 percent.

Nativity

* Between 2005 and 2006, the number of U.S.-born residents who were
uninsured increased from 33 million to 34.4 million, and their
uninsured rate increased from 12.8 percent in 2005 to 13.2 percent. The
number of foreign-born who were uninsured rose from 11.8 million in
2005 to 12.6 million, and their rate was statistically unchanged at
33.8 percent in 2006.

Regions

* The Midwest had the lowest uninsured rate in 2006, at 11.4 percent,
followed by the Northeast (12.3 percent), the West (17.9 percent) and
the South (19 percent). The Northeast and South experienced increases
in their uninsured rates -- their 2005 rates were 11.7 percent and 18
percent, respectively.

States

* Rates for 2004-2006 using a three-year average show that Texas (24.1
percent) had the highest percentage of uninsured. The rates for
Minnesota, Hawaii, Iowa, Wisconsin and Maine were lower than the rates
of the other 45 states and the District of Columbia. The rates for
these five states were not statistically different from one another.

* Fifteen states had an uninsured rate that was statistically higher
than the national rate of 15.3 percent, while 29 states and the
District of Columbia had rates statistically lower than the U.S.
average. Six states had rates that were not statistically different
from the national average.

American Community Survey (Provides state, county and city statistics)

Income

* Among states, Maryland, New Jersey and Connecticut had the highest
median household incomes in 2006, while Mississippi and West Virginia
had the lowest.

* Median household incomes in 18 states and the District of Columbia
were above the U.S. median in 2006, while 29 states were below it.

* Real median household income rose between 2005 and 2006 in 15 states
and the District of Columbia, while no states experienced a decline.
Seven states that experienced increases were in the West (Arizona,
California, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and Washington), six were
in the South (Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, North Carolina
and Texas) and two were in the Midwest (Kansas and South Dakota).

* For counties with 250,000 or more people, Fairfax and Loudoun
counties in Virginia had the highest 2006 median household incomes.
Cameron and Hidalgo counties in Texas had the lowest.

* For counties with a population between 65,000 and 249,999 people,
Hunterdon County, N.J., and Arlington County, Va., had some of the
highest 2006 median household incomes while St. Landry Parish, La.;
Apache County, Ariz.; Robeson County, N.C.; and McKinley County, N.M.,
had some of the lowest.

* For large cities (250,000 or more people), Plano, Texas, and San
Jose, Calif., had the highest median household incomes, whereas
Cleveland; Miami; Buffalo, N.Y.; and Detroit had the lowest.

* For smaller cities (65,000 to 249,999 people), Yorba Linda, Calif.,
had the highest median household income, while Youngstown, Ohio;
Muncie, Ind.; Camden, N.J.; Brownsville, Texas; Syracuse, N.Y.; College
Station, Texas; and Lawrence, Mass., had some of the lowest incomes.

Poverty

* Maryland, New Hampshire and Connecticut had some of the lowest
poverty rates in 2006. Mississippi and the District of Columbia had
some of the highest.

* Among counties with 250,000 or more people in 2006, Hidalgo and
Cameron counties in Texas had the highest proportions of people with
income below the poverty level.

On the other hand, Douglas County, Colo., and Loudoun County, Va., had
among the lowest.

* In smaller counties -- populations between 65,000 and 249,999 ?
McKinley County, N.M., had the highest proportion of people in poverty
in 2006 at 44 percent.

* Large cities (250,000 or more population) with some of the highest
poverty rates were Detroit; Buffalo, N.Y.; Cincinnati; Cleveland;
Miami; and St. Louis. The lowest percentage of people in poverty was in
Plano, Texas.

* Among the smaller cities (65,000 to 249,999 population), Brownsville,
Texas; College Station, Texas; Camden, N.J.; and Edinburg, Texas, had
some of the highest poverty rates. Meanwhile, Highlands Ranch, Colo.;
Allen, Texas; Yorba Linda, Calif.; Pleasonton, Calif.; Newton, Mass.;
Flower Mound, Texas; Naperville, Ill.; and Chino Hills, Calif., had
some of the lowest rates.

Earnings

* New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Maryland had median
earnings above $50,000 for men that worked full time, year-round in
2006. Connecticut, Maryland, New Jersey and the District of Columbia
were the only states or state equivalents where median earnings for
women who worked full time, year-round were above $40,000.

* In each of the 50 states, women had lower median earnings than men in
2006. However, in the District of Columbia, there was no statistical
difference between the earnings of men and women.

Note that estimates from the CPS-ASEC may not match the estimates from
the ACS because of differences in the questionnaires, data collection
methodology, reference period, processing procedures, etc. Both surveys
are subject to sampling and nonsampling errors. All comparisons made in
the reports have been tested and found to be statistically significant
at the 90 percent confidence level, unless otherwise noted.

For additional information on the CPS data, visit
<http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/p60226sa.pdf>. For additional
information on the ACS data, visit
<http://www.census.gov/acs/www/UseData/Accuracy/Accuracy1.htm> .- X -

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