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Data Snapshot






Over Half of Low-Income Children Live With a Parent Who Works Regularly

Number Three, November 2006   Printer-friendly (PDF) version
 
Data Highlights | Background on Low-Income Working Families | How Your State Ranks | What You Can Do | Sources | About the Data Snapshot Series

Recent data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey shows that in 2005, nearly 29 million U.S. children lived in low-income families. The majority of these children, or nearly 15 million, had at least one parent who worked regularly (see definition of low-income working families). These families are living on the economic edge—despite regular employment—and struggling to make ends meet.

Work is crucial to lift families out of poverty. But in the United States, a job alone does not always ensure sufficient income to provide for a family’s basic needs. As a result, children in low-income families often reach adulthood without the tools, experiences, and connections to help them thrive. These children are more likely to suffer from preventable illnesses, fail in school and become teen parents than children from more affluent families—and they are more likely to be unemployed as adults.

The Annie E. Casey Foundation is committed to expanding the economic security of low-income working families by connecting them to work supports like child care, health care, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and education and training to find good jobs and build careers. This Data Snapshot provides information on low-income working families, background on the barriers parents face to provide for their families, state-by-state rankings, and resources for helping working families succeed.

Figure 1 Percent of children under age 18 in low-income working families as a percent of all children in families: 2005



Source: Population Reference Bureau’s analysis of the 2005 American Community Survey.

 

Data Highlights Top

  • In 2005, 14.8 million, or one in five children, lived in one of 7.1 million low-income working families. This figure has remained relatively stable since 2000.

  • New Mexico (30 percent), Arkansas (29 percent), Texas (29 percent), Montana (28 percent) Idaho (28 percent), and Oklahoma (28 percent) have the highest rates of children living with low-income working parents.

  • In 2005, 16 percent of non-Hispanic whites, 27 percent of African Americans, and 37 percent of Hispanic children lived in low-income working families.

Figure 2 — Percent of children in low-income working families, by race and Hispanic origin, 2005



Source: Population Reference Bureau’s analysis of the 2005 American Community Survey. Categories are not mutually exclusive.

 

Background on Low-Income Working Families Top

Low-income working families often face barriers to finding good jobs and achieving financial success. These barriers prevent them from ensuring that their children get the opportunities they need to help them become successful adults. Improving access to health care, child care and education and training are among the policy interventions that are key to improving the lives and futures of working families.

  • Children of low-income working parents more often face obstacles to accessing the health care that they need to survive. In 2004 there were 5.1 million low-income children in the U.S. who lacked health insurance.

  • Of the 14.8 million children in low-income working families, 11 million are under the age of 13 and 5 million are under the age of six. These children need to be in child care while their parents earn their livings. Low-income working parents often work more than one job and work non-traditional hours, making quality, affordable care very difficult to find.

  • Success in today’s economy requires more education than ever before, but higher education continues to be inaccessible to many families. In 35 percent of low-income working families, at least one parent is without a high school degree, compared to 12 percent of working families with higher earnings. Only 42 percent of low-income working families have at least one parent with some post-secondary education, compared with 76 percent of families with better paying jobs.
 

How Your State Ranks Top

The table below shows the states ranked by the percent of children in low-income working families as a percent of children in families in 2005.

Figure 3 — Number of children under 18 in low-income working families as a percent of children in families, 2005



Source: Population Reference Bureau’s analysis of the 2005 American Community Survey. Percentages are based on unrounded numbers.

Definition of Children in Low-Income Working Families:
Children in low-income working families are children under age 18 living in families that met two criteria: (1) the family income is less than twice the federal poverty threshold; (2) at least one parent worked 50 or more weeks during the year. We use 200 percent of the federal poverty threshold—about $39,600 for a family of four with two children—the approximate amount that research has shown families need to provide for their basic needs.

Find out how your state rates in KIDS COUNT Data Center:

KIDS COUNT state grantees have produced state reports focused on the issues of work and income. Visit the KIDS COUNT issues library.

 

What You Can Do Top

Policies and programs across the country are improving the lives of children living in low-income working families. The following publications and organizations address strategies to increase the economic success for working families:

 

Sources Top

Data for this report was compiled by the Population Reference Bureau.

Tom Waldron, Brandon Roberts and Andrew Reamer with assistance from Sara Rab and Steve Ressler, Working Hard, Falling Short: America’s Working Families and the Pursuit of Economic Security (June 2004)

U.S. Census Bureau, Department of Commerce, American Community Survey, 2005.

 

About the KIDS COUNT Data Snapshot Series: Top

The Data Snapshot series highlights specific indicators of child well-being contained in the KIDS COUNT Data Center.

KIDS COUNT, a project of the Annie E. Casey Foundation, is a national and state-by-state effort to track the status of children in the United States.

KIDS COUNT exemplifies the Foundation’s commitment to using the best available data to measure the well-being of children and to enrich local, state, and national discussions concerning ways to secure better futures for all children.