Poverty and economic polarization among America’s minority and immigrant children

Type Journal Article - Ann Arbor, MI: National Poverty Center
Title Poverty and economic polarization among America’s minority and immigrant children
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2005
URL http://www.npc.umich.edu/publications/workingpaper05/paper06/05-6_LichterQianCrowley.pdf
Abstract
This paper examines recent changes in child poverty and income inequality in the 1990s
among America’s racial and immigrant minorities. The analyses are based on data from the
1990 and 2000 Public Use Microdata Samples of the U.S. decennial censuses. First, we
document changes in child poverty rates between 1990 and 2000 for several different race and
nativity groups. Our results indicate that increasing maternal employment during the 1990s
rather than changing family structure accounted for a substantial share of the recent decline in
child poverty rates. Changes in family structure played a minor role in reducing child poverty in
the 1990s but accounted for a large part of observed poverty differences among children of
different minority groups. Second, we evaluate children’s changing position in the family
income distribution, i.e., whether there is a growing gap between rich and poor children in
America and whether the income gap has been reinforced by growing racial diversity and
immigration over the past decade. Our results show that income of the poorest children
increased modestly in the 1990s (albeit not enough to shift them to the middle-class), and that
income inequality among children unexpectedly slowed or even declined for some groups during
the 1990s. These results indicate that analyses of poverty alone may misrepresent the changing
circumstances of America’s disadvantaged children

Related studies

»
»