Persistent poverty is overwhelmingly rural and is very geographically concentrated. We have redefined the USDA ERS persistent poverty classification to include metropolitan counties meeting the 20 percent or higher poor criterion and we extend the time period through the 2000 Census. With this updated definition, there are 382 counties that have had poverty rates of 20 percent or more in each decennial census between 1960 and 2000. These persistent poverty counties are overwhelmingly rural (95 percent) and disproportionately rural (16 percent of nonmetro counties versus 2 percent of metro). The local economic environment in persistent poverty counties is much less favorable than in the nation as a whole. Per capita income is lower and unemp...
was a prosperous timber community of about 4,000 people until its last mill closed in 1990. Many hou...
Abstract: The persistence of poverty in the modern American economy, with rates of poverty in some ...
In the United States, low-income people are not evenly distributed across the rural-urban landscape....
Persistent poverty is overwhelmingly rural and is very geographically concentrated. We have redefin...
There is abundant research that focuses on the causes and consequences of poverty in rural areas, a...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the Dece...
The number of nonmetropolitan counties with high poverty rates increased between the 2000 Decennial ...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the 1970...
Poverty rates are highest in the most urban and most rural areas of the United States, and are highe...
In rural America today, more than one in seven residents lives in poverty. Poverty's causes are a co...
Ph. D. University of Missouri--Columbia 1999.Research on nonmetro poverty indicates that it tends to...
Over the past four decades almost 400 U.S. counties have persistently had poverty rates in excess of...
We examine differences in income within the U.S., and the regions of persistent poverty that have ar...
This paper examines the relationship between the quality of local labor force and variation in regio...
Post-1990 income and population trends in persistent-poverty and other high-poverty rural counties s...
was a prosperous timber community of about 4,000 people until its last mill closed in 1990. Many hou...
Abstract: The persistence of poverty in the modern American economy, with rates of poverty in some ...
In the United States, low-income people are not evenly distributed across the rural-urban landscape....
Persistent poverty is overwhelmingly rural and is very geographically concentrated. We have redefin...
There is abundant research that focuses on the causes and consequences of poverty in rural areas, a...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the Dece...
The number of nonmetropolitan counties with high poverty rates increased between the 2000 Decennial ...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the 1970...
Poverty rates are highest in the most urban and most rural areas of the United States, and are highe...
In rural America today, more than one in seven residents lives in poverty. Poverty's causes are a co...
Ph. D. University of Missouri--Columbia 1999.Research on nonmetro poverty indicates that it tends to...
Over the past four decades almost 400 U.S. counties have persistently had poverty rates in excess of...
We examine differences in income within the U.S., and the regions of persistent poverty that have ar...
This paper examines the relationship between the quality of local labor force and variation in regio...
Post-1990 income and population trends in persistent-poverty and other high-poverty rural counties s...
was a prosperous timber community of about 4,000 people until its last mill closed in 1990. Many hou...
Abstract: The persistence of poverty in the modern American economy, with rates of poverty in some ...
In the United States, low-income people are not evenly distributed across the rural-urban landscape....