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Title: Poverty Measures Old and New: A Comparison


1
Poverty Measures Old and New A Comparison
  • Diana Pearce, Senior Lecturer Director,
  • Center for Womens Welfare
  • University of Washington School of Social Work

ACF Welfare Research Evaluation Conference,
Washington, DC, May 2009
2
Mollie Orshansky developed the official
poverty thresholds in the 1960s to count the
poorand that continues to be its main goal
The official poverty measure should be
interpreted as a statistical yardstick rather
than a complete description of what people and
families need to live - U.S. Census Bureau

3
Alternative Uses Have Led to Alternative Measures
  • However, over time, the federal poverty level
    (FPL) has been used for much more than a
    statistical yardstick. Today the FPL is used to
  • Determine benefit eligibility
  • Allocate program resources
  • Analyze program impacts
  • Evaluate program effectiveness
  • Measure reform success

4
Two Alternatives Have Emerged
  • 1 -Revision/modernization of current FPL
    National Academy of Sciences (NAS) first
    proposed in 1995 in Measuring Poverty.
  • Primary Purpose Track Poverty Trends
  • 2 - Basic Needs Budgets. Will use the most
    widespread of these, the Self-Sufficiency
    Standard (SSS) first calculated in 1996,
    supported by Ford Foundation grant to WOW.
  • Primary Purposes Tool to Guide Resource
    Allocation, Client Counseling, Program Impact
    Evaluation.

5
Comparing Two Alternatives
  • Todays comparison will look at how these two
    alternatives developed
  • Will look at 4 critiques of FPL, and how NAS
    SSS respond to each critique
  • Will see how each measure differs in way it is
    constructed, and how, what, and how much poverty,
    it measures
  • Will see the strengths and limitations of each.

6
Four Critiques of the FPL
  • FPL is too low
  • FPL is frozen, does not reflect rising living
    standards, changes in needs
  • FPL does not reflect impact of public policy
    benefits, taxes, tax credits.
  • FPL does not vary by place or family composition
  • How does the NAS and SSS Respond to Each Critique?

7
1 FPL is too low
  • FPL is so low that generally multiples of it are
    used
  • For program eligibility Food Stamps/SNAP
    130FPL, WIC 185, SCHIP up to 350 of FPL
  • As poverty measure Working Poor Families
    Project uses 200 FPL, as has Census Bureau
  • Studies show many experience hardships well above
    FPL

8
1 But NAS is also low why?
  • NAS thresholds are partial thresholds
  • While only food is specified in FPL, implied list
    of all other includes all costs (at the time)
  • NAS thresholds only include core essentials
  • Housing, Utilities, Food and Clothing, plus 20
    more for Miscellaneous. (sometimes, includes
    Health Care).
  • Result for NYC NAS threshold is 28 above FPL

9
1 Why NAS is low
  • Rather than include health care and work-related
    costs in the threshold, actual costs are deducted
    from income.
  • Deducting from income is not equivalent to adding
    to threshold, because
  • Actual costs, for poor, are often less than
    needed outlays so deductions are less
  • Some go without altogether so for some, no
    deduction

10
1 SSS is much higher than FPL or NASwhy?
  • SSS thresholds are full thresholds
  • SSS includes ALL the costs of basic needs for
    families with working adults
  • Housing,
  • Child Care
  • Food
  • Health Care
  • Transportation
  • Taxes

11
1 SSS is much higher than FPL or NASwhy?
  • SSS thresholds are full thresholds
  • The costs are set at minimally adequate levels,
    as defined by government yields bare bones
    budgets
  • Fair Market Rents, child care subsidies, USDA
    Low-Cost Food budget
  • SSS is 302 of FPL. In MS, it is about 200.

12
1 SSS is much higher than FPL or NASwhy?
  • SSS thresholds reflect the costs of families with
    working adults because this reflects the reality
    of poverty today
  • With the 1996 welfare reform, as a society, we
    require able-bodied adults to support their
    families through work TANF has become not only
    time-limited but short term unless there is
    disability/age.
  • Across six states where we have done demographic
    profiles, 80-85 of non-elderly, non-disabled
    households have a worker in them.
    (CA,CO,CT,NJ,PA,WA)

13
2 FPL is frozen, does not reflect rising
living standards/changing needs
  • The FPL is a hybrid measure, part absolute, part
    relative.
  • FPL is an absolute in sense it is based on the
    USDA Thrifty Food Plan.
  • FPL is a relative measure because the
    multiplier of 3 is based on all families
    expenditures on other items.
  • But then it was frozenupdated only with CPI for
    prices, but not for consumption/ living
    standards changes

14
2 NAS response make it a pure relative measure
  • NAS thresholds are pegged to expenditures on core
    essentials by families at the median
  • so NAS rises with living standards, which go up
    faster than prices
  • However, they also will fall when living
    standards fall, as in a severe recession.
  • When income falls by 10, core spending falls
    about 3, so NAS would fall somewhat.
  • Result in severe recession, number below NAS
    would tend to rise a little, less than with
    absolute measure, FPL or SSS

15
2 SSS response create a modified absolute
measure
  • SSS thresholds are based on a publicly
    established minimum standards of goods and
    services.
  • Unlike the population below the FPL, those below
    the SSS are predominantly employed.
  • Result In a severe recession, the number
    below SSS would increase substantially, more than
    the FPL.

16
2 SSS modifications on absolute measure
  • What is included is not frozen as with the FPL.
  • SSS needs updated Needs that were once off
    market, either free to the poor (health care) or
    through unpaid labor in the home (child care) are
    now included.
  • Likewise, rather than create a NEW budget list or
    measure, SSS will change, adding (e.g.,
    telephone) or subtracting (health care if there
    is national health care reform) needs as needed.

17
2 SSS modifications on absolute measure
  • SSS thresholds methodology of determining costs
    uses a combination of absolute and relative
    approaches.
  • SSS thresholds increase at rates faster than the
    CPI, but less than the NAS, reflecting some
    increase in living standards
  • on average, SSS rises about 1.5-3 more than
    just the CPI increase.

18
2 SSS modifications on absolute measure
19
2. SSS is modified absolute measure
  • Example of Indiana in chart
  • With the Midwest CPI, costs over last ten years
    rose on the average 2.74
  • With the SSS (excl. taxes), costs in Lake County
    (near Chicago/Gary), costs rose 4.50 on average,
    and in Kosciusko County, they rose 5.13 on
    average.
  • In NJ, the NE CPI rose average 2.78 over last
    ten years, but the SSS for Somerset County rose
    5.79 (data not shown).

20
3 FPL Does not reflect impact of public
policies
  • Because the FPL is a black box, one cannot
    calculate the impact of various subsidies
    replacing the cost, e.g., of housing or child
    care.
  • With no limits on costs, for example, if one
    credited the value of health care against income,
    then the sicker you are, the richer you are.
  • Because resources are measured post-tax, does
    not show impact of, for example, EITC.

21
3 NAS response allows for impact of some
benefits, taxes/tax credits
  • With the NAS, the impact of subsidies for core
    essentialsfood, housing, utilitiescan be shown.
  • But work supports that reduce work-related
    expenses, such as child care or health care,
    cannot be shown.
  • If you receive child care, you dont deduct the
    cost from income, so does not affect poverty
    status.
  • Under NAS, those lacking child care subsidies and
    those receiving are equal in measured
    well-being.

22
3 SSS allows for impact of all benefits, and
taxes/tax credits
  • With the SSS, the impact of subsidies for any
    need can be shown not just core essentials.
  • Here is an example, with left column the full
    cost in the Self-Sufficiency Standard threshold,
    and the right column how much it is reduced by
    the subsidyreducing the income needed to meet
    needs adequately by about one-third

23

24
3 SSS allows for impact of all benefits.
Impact of Work Supports on Wage Adequacy Charles
County, MD, 2007 Single Parent with One
Preschooler and One Schoolage Child
25
4 FPL does not vary by place or family
composition
  • FPL is same everywhere, even though costs vary
    considerably not just housing, but child care,
    health care, even food .

26
4 NAS response varies thresholds using a top
down approach
  • For family composition, NAS calculates threshold
    for one four-person family at the median, then
    varies by family size and composition, using
    three parameters for an equivalence scale.
  • For geographical variation, NAS varies housing
    costs component using Fair Market Rents, varying
    by region and size of place

27
4 SSS varies thresholds by place and family
composition, using a bottom up approach
  • For family composition and geography, SSS
    calculates thresholds by entering costs for the
    particular age child, or adult, in the particular
    place.each threshold is independent of each
    other.
  • This allows for anomalies
  • Expensive rural (resort) areas Marthas
    Vineyard, Aspen, Colorado
  • San Francisco much more expensive than much
    larger Los Angeles

28
Conclusions Differences, Strengths and Weaknesses
  • 1 FPL too low
  • Because the NAS thresholds are only marginally
    higher than FPL, and only actual work-related
    costs are deducted, NAS yields
  • A lower count of poverty than SSS, closer to FPL
    (1-3) SSS is 2.5- 3X FPL.
  • A higher count of elderly poverty (due to medical
    costs deducted), and same or lower count of
    families w/ children.

29
Conclusions Strengths and Weaknesses
  • 2 FPL Frozen
  • As NAS is a relative measure, strength is
    tracking trends over time that reflect overall
    changes in living standards as well as price
    changes.
  • ButNAS goes down as well as up as overall
    expenditures reflect economic recessions and
    expansions.
  • SSS is modified absolute measure, does not
    reflect rising living standards as well.

30
Conclusions Strengths and Weaknesses
  • 3 FPL does not show impact of taxes, tax
    credits or subsidies
  • NAS can show impact of subsidies that offset
    core essential costs-housing, food, utilities,
    while SSS can show impact of all subsidies,
    including work-related costs such as child care.
  • NAS can show impact of taxes tax credits,
    before and after transfers, but not individual
    effects.

31
Conclusions Strengths and Weaknesses
  • 4 FPL has no geographic inadequate family
    composition variation
  • While both NAS and SSS varies thresholds by
    family composition and geography, the NAS top
    down formulas create fewer and more regular
    variation.
  • SSS bottom up approach adds child age
    variation, has many more thresholds, but they
    reflect geographical family irregularities, and
    change more quickly.

32
For further informationEmail
pearce_at_u.washington.eduWebsiteswww.selfsuffici
encystandard.orgwww.wowonline.org
33
What is the Self-Sufficiency Standard?
  • DEFINITION OF SELF-SUFFICIENCY
  • CALCULATED FOR 37 STATES
  • The Self-Sufficiency Standard defines how much
    income a family of a certain composition in a
    given place needs to adequately meet their basic
    needs without public or private assistance.

34
The Standard addresses the major shortcomings of
the FPL
35
Percentage of Standard Needed to Meet Basic
NeedsOne Adult, One Preschooler, and One
Schoolage ChildOklahoma County, OK 2009
(Preliminary)
36
The Self-Sufficiency Wage for Oklahoma City, OK
Compared to Other U.S. Cities, 2009
(Preliminary)One Adult with One Preschooler and
One Schoolage Child
37
It changes our understanding of the number of
families with inadequate incomes.
  • Households below the Standard
  • ? ? ? ? ?
  • Households below the FPL
  • ? ? ? ? ? ?
  • ? ? ? ? ? ?
  • Results from Overlooked Undercounted for WA
    State

38
It changes our understanding of who lacks
adequate income.
39
How the Standard is Used
  • Using the Standard transforms how organizations
    help families reach the goal of economic
    self-sufficiency.

40
Tool for Setting Eligibility Levels
  • The Self-Sufficiency Standard demonstrates that
    people can work full time, earn more than the
    federal poverty guidelines, and still lack
    sufficient income to meet basic needs. The bottom
    line is that we need to help people make the
    transition from welfare to self-sufficiency and
    not just to work.
  • Tony Ross, President of the United Way of
    Pennsylvania

41
Tool for Counseling Education
  • Self-sufficiency looks different for every
    familyits not arbitrary. Thats one reason this
    report is important for people in poverty,
    policymakers and employment programs such as
    ours.
  • Kris Stadelman, CEO of the Workforce
    Development Council Seattle-King County

42
Tool for Benchmarking Evaluation
  • Working hard should move families out of
    poverty, not keep them poor. The State
    Self-Sufficiency Standard strategically outlines
    by county how much employees need to be making in
    order to break the cycle of dependency and find a
    path to self-sufficiency.
  • Estelle B. Richman, Secretary of the
    Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare

43
Tool for Planning
  • "The Self-Sufficiency Standard illustrates in
    real terms that low-wage employment does not
    necessarily generate economic security.
  • Amanda Feinstein, Senior Program Officer,
    Walter and Elise Haas Fund

44
Tool for Wage Setting
  • Whether youre talking about a living wage for
    human services workers, affordable housing, or a
    stronger commitment for government to help on
    child care issues, theyre all impacted by this
    (SSS).
  • -Rep. Jarrett Barrios (D-Cambridge)

45
Tool for Researchers Analysts
  • We use the Self-Sufficiency Standard to educate
    policymakers and the public about the needs of
    low-income households. It is a very useful and
    credible tool for examining and contrasting the
    impacts of budget and policy proposals.
  • Mike Herald, Legislative Advocate, Western
    Center on Law and Poverty

46
Tool for Everyday Use
  • The Standard has proven to be an invaluable tool
    in the fight for social justice.
  • Connie M. Pascale, Legal Services of New
    Jersey

47
A Tool for Working Families
  • This is a true indicator of what it takes to
    survive.
  • -Karlyn Jorosch, a single mother of three
    children

48
For further informationEmail
pearce_at_u.washington.eduWebsitewww.selfsufficie
ncystandard.org
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