USDA Economic Research Service Briefing Room
" "  
" "

 
Briefing Rooms

Print this page Print | E-mail this page E-mail | Bookmark & ShareBookmark/share | Translate Translate | Text only Text only | resize text smallresize text mediumresize text large

Rural Income, Poverty, and Welfare: Rural Poverty

How is poverty defined?

Any individual with total income less than an amount deemed to be sufficient to purchase basic needs of food, shelter, clothing, and other essential goods and services is classified as poor. (For details, see "How the Census Bureau Measures Poverty.") The amount of income necessary to purchase these basic needs is the poverty line or threshold and is set by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The 2003 poverty line for an individual under 65 years of age is $9,573. The poverty line for a three-person family with one child and two adults is $14,810. For a family with two adults and three children the poverty line is $21,959. (For a complete list of poverty lines by size of family and number of children, see the U.S. Census Bureau’s tables of Poverty Thresholds.) Income includes cash income (pretax income and cash welfare assistance), but excludes in-kind welfare assistance, such as food stamps and Medicaid. Poverty thresholds are set for families by size and composition, and they are updated annually to correct for inflation.

Metro-nonmetro comparisons of poverty rates pose some difficult measurement issues that are worth bearing in mind. As one example, U.S. poverty rates do not make any adjustments for differences in cost of living across areas. If it is assumed that the cost of purchasing basic needs is cheaper in nonmetro areas, then the nonmetro poverty rate would be lower. There are many other examples though, and the effect they would have on the area poverty rates go in either direction. For example, the poverty thresholds do not account for the possibility that basic needs will differ across areas. It could be the case that transportation to work in nonmetro areas is much more expensive than in metro areas where access to public transit is greater. Similarly, the measure of poverty does not account for access to other "public goods," such as health care, schooling, communication networks, nor "public bads," such as noise and air pollution which also differ systematically across metro and nonmetro areas.

 

For more information, contact: Robert Gibbs

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: November 10, 2004