Public concern with poverty derives in large part from the assumption that low income families cannot afford necessities. Yet official poverty statistics focus on measuring income, not on measuring material hardship. Two surveys of Chicago residents measure whether families could afford food, housing and medical care. A family's official income-to-needs ratio explained 24 percent of the variance in the amount of material hardship it reported. Adjustments for family size, age, health, noncash benefits, home ownership, and access to credit explain another 15 percent. Variations in permanent income explain almost none of the remaining variance in hardship. Among families with the same official income-to-needs ratio, material hardship varies by...
Mental health disorders are of great social, economic, and policy concern. A higher incidence of maj...
The measurement of poverty as ‘consistent’ poverty offers a solution to one of the primary problems ...
This study analyzes the 2002 wave of the National Survey of America’s Families to describe income po...
In this brief, we examine trends in material hardship for families, focusing specifically on geogra...
Research on material hardship mostly takes the public policy perspective, whereas the role of nonpro...
This paper examines the relationship between income and the extent of material hardship and explores...
There are four distinct, related types of material hardship—basic expense hardship, food insecurity,...
Family background has a strong and well-established predictive effect for individuals' lifecourse tr...
Graphic presentation addressing material hardships among American families. Data presented in charts...
Abstract Previous attempts to measure material well-being or hardship have not made clear the relati...
Using data from the 2008 and 2010 waves of the Health and Retirement Study to analyze the determinan...
We use longitudinal data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) spanning the 199...
Who is poor? For decades, the Official Poverty Measure largely answered this question. Using measure...
Lower income households are at risk for material hardship, particularly amidst the economic fallout ...
Seventeen percent of all American children live in families whose incomes fall below the federal pov...
Mental health disorders are of great social, economic, and policy concern. A higher incidence of maj...
The measurement of poverty as ‘consistent’ poverty offers a solution to one of the primary problems ...
This study analyzes the 2002 wave of the National Survey of America’s Families to describe income po...
In this brief, we examine trends in material hardship for families, focusing specifically on geogra...
Research on material hardship mostly takes the public policy perspective, whereas the role of nonpro...
This paper examines the relationship between income and the extent of material hardship and explores...
There are four distinct, related types of material hardship—basic expense hardship, food insecurity,...
Family background has a strong and well-established predictive effect for individuals' lifecourse tr...
Graphic presentation addressing material hardships among American families. Data presented in charts...
Abstract Previous attempts to measure material well-being or hardship have not made clear the relati...
Using data from the 2008 and 2010 waves of the Health and Retirement Study to analyze the determinan...
We use longitudinal data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) spanning the 199...
Who is poor? For decades, the Official Poverty Measure largely answered this question. Using measure...
Lower income households are at risk for material hardship, particularly amidst the economic fallout ...
Seventeen percent of all American children live in families whose incomes fall below the federal pov...
Mental health disorders are of great social, economic, and policy concern. A higher incidence of maj...
The measurement of poverty as ‘consistent’ poverty offers a solution to one of the primary problems ...
This study analyzes the 2002 wave of the National Survey of America’s Families to describe income po...