Census Bureau News: Income, Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2014
Income, Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2014
NEWS RELEASE:
CB15-157
SEPT. 16,
2015 — The U.S. Census Bureau
announced today that in 2014, there was no statistically significant change
from 2013 in either real median household income or the official poverty rate. At
the same time, the percentage of people without health insurance coverage
declined. Unless otherwise noted, the following results for the nation were
compiled from information collected in the 2015 Current Population Survey
Annual Social and Economic Supplement.
The nation’s official poverty rate in 2014 was 14.8
percent, which means there were 46.7 million people in poverty. Neither the
poverty rate nor the number of people in poverty were statistically different
from 2013 estimates. This marks the fourth consecutive year in which the number
of people in poverty was not statistically different from the previous year’s
estimate.
Median household income in the United States in 2014
was $53,657, not statistically different in real terms from the 2013 median income.
This is the third consecutive year that the annual change was not statistically
significant, following two consecutive annual declines.
The percentage of people without health insurance
coverage for the entire 2014 calendar year was 10.4 percent, down from 13.3
percent in 2013. The number of people without health insurance declined to 33.0
million from 41.8 million over the period.
These findings are contained in two reports: Income
and Poverty in the United States: 2014and Health
Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2014. The Current
Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement was conducted between
February and April 2015 and collected information about income and health
insurance coverage during the 2014 calendar year.The Current Population Survey,
sponsored jointly by the U.S. Census Bureau and U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics, is conducted every month and is the primary source of labor force
statistics for the U.S. population; it is used to calculate the monthly
unemployment rate estimates. Supplements are added in most months; the Annual Social
and Economic Supplement questionnaire is designed to give annual,
calendar-year, national estimates of income, poverty and health insurance numbers
and rates.
Another Census Bureau report, The
Supplemental Poverty Measure: 2014, was also released today. With
support from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, it describes research showing a different
way of measuring poverty in the United States. The supplemental poverty measure
serves as an additional indicator of economic well-being and provides a deeper
understanding of economic conditions. The Census Bureau has published poverty
estimates using this supplemental measure annually since 2011. Today marks the
first time the official poverty measure and the supplemental poverty measure have
been released simultaneously.
The Current Population Survey-based income and poverty
report includes comparisons with one year earlier and to 2007 (before the last
recession); historical tables in the report contain statistics back to 1959. The
health insurance report is based on both the Current Population Survey and the
American Community Survey and includes comparisons with one year earlier. State
and local income and poverty results, as well as local health insurance coverage
results, will be available Thursday, Sept. 17, from the American Community
Survey.
Income
·Real median incomes
in 2014 for family households ($68,426) and nonfamily households ($32,047) did
not experience statistically significant changes from the levels in 2013.
·A comparison of real
median household income over the past seven years shows that income is 6.5 percent
lower than in 2007, the year before the nation entered the most recent economic
recession.
Race and Hispanic Origin
(Race data refer to people reporting a single race
only; Hispanics can be of any race)
·The real median
income of non-Hispanic white households declined by 1.7 percent between 2013
and 2014. Changes were not statistically significant for any of the other race
groups or for Hispanics. (See Table
A.)
Regions
·Households in the
West experienced a 4.6 percent decline in real median income between 2013 and
2014, whereas the apparent changes in household income were not statistically
significant in the other three regions. (See Table
A.)
Earnings
·The changes in
the real median earnings of men and women who worked full time, year- round
between 2013 and 2014 were not statistically significant. In 2014, the median earnings
of women who worked full time, year-round ($39,621) was 79 percent of that for men
working full time, year-round ($50,383) ─ not statistically different from the
2013 ratio. The female-to-male earnings ratio has not shown a statistically
significant annual increase since 2007.
·The number of men
and women working full time, year-round with earnings increased by 1.2 million
and 1.6 million, respectively, between 2013 and 2014. Taken in combination with
an increase of about 800,000 in the number of women with earnings, regardless
of work experience, and no statistically significant change for their male
counterparts, this suggests a shift of workers moving from part-year, part-time
work status to full-time, year-round work status. The respective increases in
the number of men and women working full time, year-round with earnings were
not statistically different from one another, nor were they statistically
different from the increase in the number of women with earnings, regardless of
work experience.
Income Inequality
·The Gini index
was 0.480 in 2014; the change from 2013 was not statistically significant.
Since 1993, the earliest year available for comparable measures of income
inequality, the Gini index has increased 5.9 percent. (Developed more than a
century ago, the Gini index is the most common measure of household income
inequality used by economists, with 0.0 representing total income equality and 1.0
equivalent to total inequality.)
·Changes in income
inequality between 2013 and 2014 were not statistically significant as measured
by the shares of aggregate household income by quintiles.
Poverty
·The poverty rate
for families and the number of families in poverty were 11.6 percent and 9.5
million in 2014, neither statistically different from the 2013 estimates.
·In 2014, 6.2
percent of married-couple families, 30.6 percent of families with a female
householder and 15.7 percent of families with a male householder lived in
poverty. For married-couple families, both the poverty rate and the number in
poverty increased. For families with a female householder, the poverty rate was
not statistically different from 2013, while the number in poverty declined. Neither
the poverty rates nor the estimate of the number of families in poverty showed
any statistically significant change between 2013 and 2014 for families with a
male householder.
Thresholds
·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 2014 was
$24,230.
·Between 2013 and
2014, changes in poverty rates for males (13.4 percent) and females (16.1
percent) were not statistically significant.
Race and Hispanic Origin
(Race data refer to
people reporting a single race only; Hispanics can be of any race)
·None of the major
race and ethnic groups experienced a statistically significant change in their
poverty rates nor in the number of people in poverty. Table
B details 2014 poverty rates and numbers in poverty, as well as changes
since 2013 in these measures, for race groups and Hispanics.
Age
·In 2014, 13.5
percent of people 18 to 64 (26.5 million) were in poverty compared with 10.0
percent of people 65 and older (4.6 million) and 21.1 percent of children under
18 (15.5 million). None of these age groups experienced a statistically significant
change in the number or rates of people in poverty between 2013 and 2014.
Regions
·None of the four
regions experienced a significant change in the poverty rate or the number in
poverty between 2013 and 2014. (See Table
B.)
Shared Households
Shared households are defined as households that
include at least one “additional” adult: a person 18 or older who is not
enrolled in school and is not the householder, spouse or cohabiting partner of
the householder. The information on shared households covers adults living in
the household at the time of the survey.
·In spring 2007,
prior to the recession, there were 19.7 million shared households, representing
17.0 percent of all households. By spring 2015, the number had increased to 23.9
million and represented 19.2 percent of all households. Between 2014 and 2015, however,
the changes in the number and percentage of shared households were not
statistically significant.
·In spring 2015, 6.5
million young adults age 25 to 34 (15.1 percent) lived with their parents. Neither
the number nor percentage of young adults living with their parents experienced
a statistically significant change from 2014.
·It is difficult
to precisely assess the impact of household sharing on overall poverty rates. In
2014, young adults age 25 to 34, living with their parents, had an official
poverty rate of 7.2 percent, but if their poverty status were determined using
only their own income, 39.4 percent had an income below the poverty threshold
for a single person under age 65.
Supplemental Poverty Measure
The supplemental poverty measure is an effort to take into account many of
the government programs designed to assist low-income families and individuals
that were not included in the current official poverty measure. While the nation’s official poverty rate, presented in
the Income
and Poverty in the United States: 2014 report, was 14.8 percent in
2014, the universe for the supplemental poverty measure is different because it
includes children younger than 15 who are not related to anyone in the
household, such as foster children. Therefore, the official poverty rate presented
in the Supplemental
Poverty Measure: 2014 report was 14.9 percent.
The supplemental poverty measure also released today
shows:
·The supplemental
poverty rate was 15.3 percent, not a statistically significant changefrom
2013.
·There
were 48.4 million poor in 2014 using the supplemental measure, higher than the
47.0 million using the official poverty definition with the supplemental
poverty measure universe.
·The
number of poor in 2014 according to the supplemental measure was not
statistically different from the 2013 number.
·Including
tax credits and noncash benefits results in lower poverty rates for some
groups. For instance, the supplemental poverty rate was lower for children than
the official rate: 16.7 percent compared with 21.5 percent.
While the official poverty measure includes only pre-tax
money income, the supplemental measure adds the value of in-kind benefits, such
as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, school lunches, housing
assistance and refundable tax credits. Additionally, the supplemental poverty
measure deducts necessary expenses for critical goods and services from income.
Expenses that are deducted include taxes, child care and commuting expenses,
out-of-pocket medical expenses and child support paid to another household. The
supplemental poverty measure permits the examination of the effects of
government transfers on poverty estimates. For example, not including
refundable tax credits (the Earned Income Tax Credit and the refundable portion
of the child tax credit) in resources, the poverty rate for all people would
have been 18.4 percent rather than 15.3 percent.
The measure
does not replace the official poverty measure and will not be used to determine
eligibility for government programs.
Health Insurance Coverage
·The Current
Population Survey shows that the percentage of people with health insurance for
all or part of 2014 was 89.6 percent, higher than the rate in 2013 (86.7
percent).
·After several years of a relatively stable uninsured rate
between 2008 and 2013 as measured by the American Community Survey, the
percentage of the population who were uninsured dropped in 2014. This represents
the largest percentage point decline in the uninsured rate during this period.Over
time, changes in the rate of health insurance coverage and the distribution of
coverage types may reflect economic trends, shifts in the demographic
composition of the population, and policy changes that impact access to health
care. Several such policy changes occurred in 2014, when many provisions of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act went into effect.
·Between 2013 and
2014, the increase in the percentage of the population covered by health insurance
was due to an increase in the rates of both private and government coverage.
The rate of private coverage increased by 1.8 percentage points to 66.0 percent
in 2014, and the government coverage rate increased by 2.0 percentage points to
36.5 percent, changes which were not significantly different from each other.
·Of the subtypes
of health insurance, employment-based insurance covered the most people (55.4
percent of the population), followed by Medicaid (19.5 percent), Medicare (16.0
percent), direct-purchase (14.6 percent) and military health care (4.5
percent).
·Between 2013 and
2014, the greatest changes in coverage rates were the increases in
direct-purchase health insurance and Medicaid. The largest percentage-point
change in coverage was for direct-purchase, which increased by 3.2 percentage
points to cover 14.6 percent of people for some or all of 2014. The percentage
of people with Medicaid coverage during all or part of the year increased by
2.0 percentage points to 19.5 percent in 2014.
·In 2014, the
uninsured rate for children younger than 19 was 6.2 percent, down from 7.5
percent in 2013.
·In 2014, the
uninsured rate for children younger than 19 in poverty (8.6 percent) was higher
than the uninsured rate for children not in poverty (5.6 percent).
Race and Hispanic Origin
(Race data refer to
people reporting a single race only; Hispanics can be of any race)
·Between 2013 and
2014, the overall rate of health insurance coverage increased for all race and
Hispanic origin groups. The increase was comparable for blacks, Asians and
Hispanics (just over 4.0 percentage points) and lower for non-Hispanic whites
(2.1 percentage points).
·In 2014,
non-Hispanic whites had a higher rate of health insurance coverage (92.4
percent) compared with blacks and Asians (88.2 percent and 90.7 percent,
respectively). Hispanics had the lowest rate of health insurance coverage, at
80.1 percent.
Nativity
·Between 2013 and
2014, health insurance coverage rates increased for all nativity groups. The
foreign-born population, including both naturalized citizens and noncitizens,
experienced a larger increase in health insurance coverage than did the native-born
population.
·In 2014, the
uninsured rate of noncitizens was over three times that of the native-born
population (31.2 percent for noncitizens compared with 8.7 percent for the native-born
population).
States
·According to the
American Community Survey, during 2014, the state with the lowest percentage of
people without health insurance at the time of the interview was Massachusetts
(3.3 percent), while the highest uninsured rate was for Texas (19.1 percent).
·The American
Community Survey also showed that between 2013 and 2014, all 50 states and the
District of Columbia showed a decrease in the percentage of people without
health insurance coverage at the time of the interview. The declines for the
states ranged from 0.4 percentage points to 5.8 percentage points.
State and Local Estimates from the American Community
Survey
On
Thursday, Sept. 17, the Census Bureau will release single-year estimates of
median household income, poverty and health insurance for all states, counties,
places and other geographic units with populations of 65,000 or more from the
2014 American
Community Survey. These statistics will include numerous social,
economic and housing characteristics, such as language, education, commuting,
employment, mortgage status and rent. Later today, subscribers will be able to access
these estimates on an embargoed
basis.
The American Community Survey
provides a wide range of important statistics about people and housing for every
community (i.e., census tracts or neighborhoods) across the nation. The results
are used by everyone from town and city planners to retailers and homebuilders.
The survey is the only source of local estimates for most of the 40 topics it
covers for even the smallest communities.
Redesigned
Questions
The 2015 Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic
Supplement data on income and poverty are based on a redesigned questionnaire
aimed at improving income reporting, increasing response rates, reducing
reporting errors by taking better advantage of an automated questionnaire
environment and updating questions on retirement income and the income
generated from retirement accounts and other assets.
The 2013 income and poverty estimates in the report
released today differ from those released in September 2014 on the Internet and
in the report Income
and Poverty in the United States: 2013. All of the approximately 98,000
addresses included in the 2014 Current Population Survey Annual Social and
Economic Supplement were eligible to receive the redesigned set of health
insurance questions. The redesigned income questions were implemented to a
subsample of the 98,000 addresses using a probability split panel design.
Approximately 68,000 addresses were eligible to receive a set of income
questions similar to those used in the 2013 Current Population Survey Annual
Social and Economic Supplement and the remaining 30,000 addresses were eligible
to receive the redesigned income questions. The source of the new 2013 data
used in the report released today is the portion of the sample which received
the redesigned income questions: approximately 30,000 addresses. A probability
split panel design means the Census Bureau assigned each address in the sample
to either the traditional questionnaire or the alternate redesigned
questionnaire based on a random number.
The Current Population Survey
Annual Social and Economic Supplement is subject to sampling and nonsampling
errors. All comparisons made in the report have been tested and found to be
statistically significant at the 90 percent confidence level, unless otherwise
noted.