Poverty Facts
Families
- Families need income equivalent to twice the official poverty standards to become economically sufficient. To become self-sufficient, families must attain 200% of the poverty level.2
- Generational poverty is defined as being in poverty for two generations or longer. Situational poverty is a shorter time and is caused by circumstance (i.e., death, illness, divorce, etc.).5
Health
- Low-income people are nearly five times more likely to be without health insurance than people with incomes at self-sufficiency levels.3
- Disabilities and health conditions are an over-looked cofactor in poverty. One fourth of all adults in poverty collect Social Security Disability Income (SSDI) or Supplemental Security Income (SSI). Almost a third reports a health condition that limits or prevents work.3
Children
- The United States child poverty rate is substantially higher - often two to three times higher - than that of most other major Western industrialized nations.5
- Poor children are twice as likely to repeat a grade and are more likely to move frequently that their more advantaged peers.2
- Children born into poverty are more likely to have been low birth weight babies and are more likely to die in the first month than other children.2
- People are most vulnerable to poverty when they turn 18.4
- Children under 6 remain particularly vulnerable to poverty.5
- Poor inner-city youths are seven times more likely to be the victims of child abuse or neglect than are children of high social and economic status.5
- Poor children at twice as likely to repeat a grade.2
* List of Resources
For more information about our studies completed by Cincinnati Works, please contact Rick Wegmann at 937.528.6484.
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