For comparable information about all children, see Basic Facts About Low-income Children, 2009: Children Under Age 18, or about infants and toddlers, see Basic Facts About Low-income Children, 2009: Children Under Age 3, or about young children, see Basic Facts About Low-income Children, 2009: Children Under Age 6 or Basic Facts About Low-income Children, 2009: Children Aged 6 through 11.
Children represent 25 percent of the population. Yet, they comprise 36 percent of all people in poverty. Among children, 42 percent live in low-income families and 21 percent live in poor families. Among our oldest children, adolescents aged 12 through 17, 38 percent live in low-income families and 17 percent live in poor families. Winding up in a low-income or poor family does not happen by chance. There are significant factors related to children’s experiences with economic insecurity, such as race/ethnicity and parents’ education and employment. This fact sheet describes the demographic, socio-economic, and geographic characteristics of adolescents and their parents, highlighting the important factors that appear to distinguish low-income and poor children in this age group from their less disadvantaged counterparts.
How many adolescent children ages 12 through 17 in the United States live in low-income families?
There are over 24 million adolescents ages 12 through 17 in the United States.
- 38 percent – 9.3 million – live in low-income families.
- 17 percent – 4.2 million – live in poor families.
What is the federal poverty level (FPL) in 2010?
- $22,050 for a family of four.
- $18,310 for a family of three.
- $14,570 for a family of two.
Is a poverty-level income enough to support a family?
Research suggests that, on average, families need an income equal to about two times the federal poverty level to meet their most basic needs. Families with incomes below this level are referred to as low income:
- $44,100 for a family of four.
- $36,620 for a family of three.
- $29,140 for a family of two.
These dollar amounts approximate the average minimum income families need to make ends meet, but actual expenses vary greatly by locality. For a family of four, the cost of basic family expenses is about $37,000 per year in El Paso, TX, $42,000 in Spokane, WA, $45,000 in Detroit, MI, and $49,000 in Buffalo, NY.
Has the percentage of adolescents living in low-income and poor families changed over time?
The percentage of adolescent children living in low-income families (both poor and near poor) has been on the rise – increasing from 33 percent in 2000 to nearly 38 percent in 2009. During this time period, the overall number of adolescent children ages 12 through 17 increased by three percent while the number who were low-income and poor increased by 19 percent and 29 percent, respectively. This upward trend in low-income and poor children follows on the heels of a decade of decline in the 1990s.
How do adolescents compare to the rest of the population?
The percentage of adolescents in low-income families surpasses that of adults. In addition, children ages 12 through 17 are nearly twice as likely as adults aged 65 and older to live in poor families.
Does the percentage of children in low-income families vary by children’s age?
The overall percentages of children living in low-income and poor families mask important variation by age. Adolescents are less likely to live in low-income families than younger children.
- 44 percent of children under age 12 – 22 million – live in low-income families.
- 38 percent of children ages 12 through 17 years – 9.3 million –live in low-income families.
Does the percentage of adolescents in low-income families vary by race/ethnicity?
Although black, American Indian, and Hispanic adolescents are disproportionately low income, whites comprise the largest group of low-income adolescents.
- 26 percent of white adolescents – 3.7 million – live in low-income families.
- 58 percent of black adolescents– 2.1 million – live in low-income families.
- 36 percent of Asian adolescents – 0.4 million – live in low-income families.
- 54 percent of American Indian adolescents – 0.1 million – live in low-income families.
- 40 percent of adolescents of some other race – 0.2 million – live in low-income families.
- 59 percent of Hispanic adolescents – 2.8 million – live in low-income families.
Does the percentage of adolescents in low-income families vary by parents’ country of birth?
- 58 percent of adolescents of immigrant parents – 2.4 million– live in low-income families.
- 34 percent of adolescents of native-born parents – 6.6 million – live in low-income families.
What are the family characteristics of low-income adolescents?
Parents’ Education
Higher levels of parents’ education decrease the likelihood that a child will live in a low-income or poor family. Yet, 41 percent of low-income adolescents and more than one-third of poor adolescents have a parent with at least some college education.
- 84 percent of adolescents with parents who have less than a high school degree – 2.2 million – live in low-income families.
- 55 percent of adolescents with parents who have no more than a high school degree – 3.2 million – live in low-income families.
- 24 percent of adolescents with at least one parent who has some college or more education – 3.8 million – live in low-income families.
Parents’ Employment
Although adolescents with a full-time, year-round employed parent comprise almost half of the low-income population, they are less likely to be living in a low-income family compared to adolescents with parents who work part-time/part-year or who are not employed.
- 25 percent of adolescents with at least one parent who works full-time, year-round – 4.4 million – live in low-income families.
- 67 percent of adolescents with at least one parent who works part-time or part-year – 2.7 million –live in low-income families.
- 90 percent of adolescents with no employed parents – 2.2 million – live in low-income families.
Family Structure
Forty-six percent of adolescents in low-income families – 4.3 million– and 35 percent of adolescents in poor families – 1.5 million– live with married parents.
- 26 percent of adolescents with married parents – 4.3 million –live in low-income families.
- 62 percent of adolescents with single parents – 5 million –live in low-income families.
Does the percentage of adolescents in low-income families vary by where they live?
Region
- 41 percent of adolescents in the South – 3.7 million – live in low-income families.
- 39 percent of adolescents in the West – 2.2 million – live in low-income families.
- 34 percent of adolescents in the Northeast – 1.5 million – live in low-income families.
- 35 percent of adolescents in the Midwest – 1.9 million – live in low-income families.
Type of Area
- 49 percent of adolescents in urban areas – 2.9 million – live in low-income families.
- 30 percent of adolescents in suburban areas – 3.3 million – live in low-income families.
- 44 percent of adolescents in rural areas – 1.7 million – live in low-income families.
Residential Instability and Home Ownership
Research suggests that stable housing is important for healthy child development. Yet, relative to children ages 12 through 17 in above low-income families, adolescents living in low-income families were over two times more likely to have moved in the past year and nearly two times less likely to live in families that own a home.
- 15 percent of adolescents in low-income families – 1.4 million – moved in the last year.
- 7 percent of adolescents in above low-income families – 1.1 million – moved in the last year.
- 47 percent of adolescents in low-income families – 4.4 million – live with a family that owns a home.
- 85 percent of adolescents in above low-income families – 12.9 million – live with a family that owns a home.
Are adolescents in low-income families covered by health insurance?
Consistent with research suggesting older children in general are particularly at risk of being uninsured, low-income and poor adolescents are more likely to be without health insurance coverage than their younger counterparts with approximately 19 percent in low-income families and 20 percent in poor families reporting no insurance coverage of any kind. Although one-third of low-income adolescents are covered by private health insurance, Medicaid is the most likely provider with 47 percent of low-income children and more than one-half of poor children (60 percent) covered by this public insurance program.
- 19 percent of adolescents living in low-income families – 1.8 million – are uninsured.
- 33 percent of adolescents living in low-income families – 3 million – are covered by private insurance.
- 47 percent of adolescents living in low-income families – 4.4 million – are covered by Medicaid.
- 19 percent of adolescents living in low-income families – 1.8 million – are covered by their state’s Children Health Insurance Program (CHIP).
This fact sheet is supported by grants from The Anne E. Casey Foundation and The Atlantic Philanthropies.
Endnotes
This fact sheet is part of the National Center for Children in Poverty’s demographic fact sheet series and is updated annually. Unless otherwise noted, analysis of the U.S. Current Population Survey, Annual Social and Economic Supplement, March 2010, was conducted by Michelle Chau, Kalyani Thampi, and Vanessa R. Wight of NCCP. Yumiko Aratani provided feedback that contributed to the analysis. Estimates include children living in households with at least one parent and most children living apart from both parents (for example, children being raised by grandparents). Children living independently, living with a spouse, or in group quarters are excluded from these data. Children ages 14 and under living with only unrelated adults were not included because data on their income status were not available. Among children who do not live with at least one parent, parental characteristics are those of the householder and/or the householder’s spouse. Special thanks to Morris Ardoin, Amy Palmisano, and Telly Valdellon.
1. These numbers are from the federal poverty guidelines issued annually by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The demographic findings in this fact sheet were calculated using more complex versions of the federal poverty measure – the thresholds issued by the U.S. Census Bureau. Please see http:// www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty/ data/threshld/index.html for the 2009 poverty thresholds. For more information on measuring poverty and the differences between the federal poverty guidelines and the thresholds, see the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services website.
2. Fass, Sarah. 2009. Measuring Poverty in the United States. New York, NY: National Center for Children in Poverty, Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health.
3. These figures were derived from NCCP’s Basic Needs Budget Calculator.
4. In the most recent CPS, parents could report children’s race as one or more of the following: “White,” “Black,” “American Indian or Alaskan Native,” or “Asian and/or Hawaiian/Pacific Islander.” In a separate question, parents could report whether their children were of Hispanic origin. For the data reported, children whose parent reported their race as White, Black, American Indian or Alaskan Native, or Asian and/ or Hawaiian/Pacific Islander and their ethnicity as non-Hispanic are assigned their respective race. Children who were reported to be of more than one race were assigned as Other. Children whose parent identified them as Hispanic were categorized as Hispanic, regardless of their reported race.
5. Adolescents living in households with one immigrant parent and one nativeborn parent (approximately 1.1 million) are not included in these estimates.
6. Parent’s education is the education level of the most highly educated parent living in the household. Parents can either have no high school degree; a high school degree, but no college; or some college or more.
7. Parent’s employment is the employment level of the parent in the household who maintained the highest level of employment in the previous year. Parents can either have no employment in the previous year, part-year or part-time employment, or full-time, year-round employment. Part-year or part-time employment is defined as either working less than 50 weeks in the previous year or less than 35 hours per week. Full-time, year-round employment is defined as working at least 50 weeks in the previous year and 35 hours or more per week for more than half the year.
8. Aratani, Yumiko. 2009. Homeless Children and Youth: Causes and Consequences. New York, NY: National Center for Children in Poverty, Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health.
9. People can report more than one type of insurance coverage. Children not covered by private health insurance, Medicaid, CHIP, or Military insurance at any time during 2009 are considered uninsured.
10. Schwarz, Susan Wile. 2009. Adolescent Mental Health in the United States: Facts for Policymakers. New York, NY: National Center for Children in Poverty, Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health.