Census Bureau Releases 2014 Income and Poverty Estimates for All Counties
Census Bureau Releases 2014 Income and Poverty Estimates for All Counties
TIP SHEET: CB15-TPS.105
December
9, 2015 —Today, the Census Bureau released the
latest findings from its Small
Area Income and Poverty Estimates program. The program provides the only
up-to-date, single-year income and poverty statistics for all counties and
school districts — roughly 3,140 counties and nearly 14,000 school districts nationally.
Tables provide
statistics on the number of people in poverty, the number of children younger
than age 5 in poverty (for states only), the number of children ages 5 to 17 in
families in poverty, the number younger than age 18 in poverty, and median
household income. At the school district level, estimates are available for the
total population, the number of children ages 5 to 17 and the number of
children ages 5 to 17 in families in poverty.
These estimates
combine the latest data from the American Community Survey with aggregate data
from federal tax records, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program,
decennial censuses and the Population Estimates Program.
According to
the 2014 estimates:
·Median household income at the county
level in 2014 ranged from $21,658 to $125,635, with a median county level value
of $45,229.
·Based on poverty rate estimates for all
3,141 counties for all ages, 26 percent (820 counties) had a statistically
significant increase in poverty between 2007 (the year before the most recent
recession) and 2014. Only 1 percent of counties had a statistically significant
decrease in poverty during that period.
Statistics from
the Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates program are an input to the
allocation formula for Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
Title I distributes funding to school districts based on the number and
percentage of low-income children. The U.S. Department of Education (ED)
expects to use the 2014 estimates to calculate fiscal year 2016 allocations for
Title I and several other ED programs for use by states and school districts
primarily in the 2016-2017 school year.
No news release
associated with this report. Tip Sheet only.