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Briefing Rooms

Rural Income, Poverty, and Welfare: Rural Poverty

In 2003, 14.2 percent of the population, or 7.5 million people, living in nonmetropolitan (nonmetro) areas were poor. This poverty rate has remained unchanged from 2001 and 2002. In contrast, the metropolitan (metro) poverty rate was 12.1 percent in 2003, inching up a half percentage point in each of the last 2 years (11.1 percent in 2001 and 11.6 percent in 2002). See How is Poverty Defined? for more information. This continued increase in the metro poverty rate has narrowed the gap between metro and nonmetro poverty rates to 2.1 percentage points. While the gap has diminished, the nonmetro rate continues its historic pattern of being higher than the metro poverty rate.

The higher incidence of nonmetro poverty relative to metro poverty has existed since the 1960s when poverty rates were first officially recorded. In the 1980s, the average incidence of poverty was 4.4 percentage points higher in nonmetro areas than in metro areas; in the 1990s, the average difference was 2.6 percentage points. During the 1990s, the nonmetro poverty rate declined fairly steadily from a high of 17.1 percent in 1993 to a record-low rate of 13.4 percent in 2000. Nonmetro poverty had never before been this low. The decline in poverty during the 1990s was mirrored by growth in the economy overall. Between 1993 and 2000, the economy grew by 4 percent per year, significantly higher than the average growth rate of 2.7 percent during the 20 years prior to 1993. With the recession in 2001, nonmetro poverty went up to 14.2 percent where it has since remained.

Regional Patterns of Rural Poverty

While the overall rate of nonmetro poverty is higher than metro poverty, the difference in nonmetro and metro poverty rates varies significantly across regions. In the Midwest, the metro poverty rate is actually higher than the nonmetro rate. In contrast in the South, the nonmetro poverty rate at 17.7 percent is almost 5 percentage points higher than the metro rate. The difference in poverty rates in the South is particularly important for the overall nonmetro poverty rates because close to 44 percent of the nonmetro population live in this region. In the West, with approximately 15 percent of the nonmetro population, the nonmetro poverty rate was 14.6 percent while the rate for the metro population was 12.3 percent.

Race, Ethnicity, and Rural Poverty

Poverty rates by race reveal large differences with non-Hispanic Blacks having the highest incidence of nonmetro poverty at a rate of 30.5 percent. Nonmetro Hispanics also had a high rate at 25.4 percent, or more than one out of every four nonmetro Hispanics living in poverty in 2003. Both of these rates were more than 2 times larger than the rate for non-Hispanic Whites with a poverty rate of 11.3 percent in nonmetro areas. The high rate of poverty for Hispanics is noteworthy as their share of the nonmetro population has been increasing over the last decade. According to the 1990 Census, Hispanics comprised less than 3 percent of the nonmetro population. This proportion increased to approximately 5.5 percent by 2000, making them the fastest growing nonmetro minority. Poverty rates by race and ethnicity also show stark differences between nonmetro and metro areas. The poverty rate for non-Hispanic Blacks living in nonmetro regions was more than 7 percentage points higher than for those living in metro regions.

Families and Rural Poverty

Family structure has a significant bearing on poverty. Families headed by two adults are likely to have more sources of income than single-adult families with children and are therefore less likely to be poor. The highest poverty rate by type of family is for female-headed, nonmetro families. More than one out of every three persons living in nonmetro families that are headed by a female is poor. More than one out of every six persons living in nonmetro families that are headed by a single male is poor. These rates are both much higher than the poverty rates for nonmetro families headed by a husband and wife, where only one out of every 14 persons is poor. Those persons living in families with a husband and wife present have the lowest rates of poverty with 7.1 percent poor in nonmetro areas and 6 percent poor in metro areas. Poverty rates by family type also reveal large metro-nonmetro differences in poverty rates. The nonmetro poverty rate for female-headed families is more than 7 percentage points higher than this rate for metro families.

Poor Children in Rural Areas

Family structure also affects child poverty rates. Families headed by one adult are not only more likely to be poor, but also by definition, contain more children than similar-sized families headed by two adults. This is one of the reasons why children (0-17 years of age) continue to have the highest poverty rate by age group. The 2003 child poverty rate in nonmetro areas was 20.1 percent and 17.1 percent in metro areas. In contrast, the poverty rate for older persons (65 years of age and older) was 11 percent in nonmetro and 10 percent in metro regions. Similarly, adults (18-64 years of age) had much lower poverty rates than children, with 10.8 percent of all adults in poverty. The high rates of child poverty in both metro and nonmetro areas have persisted for more than a decade despite significant declines in the rates over time. Between 1993 and 2003, the nonmetro child poverty rate has been at least 7 percentage points higher than the nonmetro poverty rate for nonelderly adults. Over this same time period, nonmetro child poverty was at its highest in 1993, when almost one child out of every four nonmetro children was poor. Over the last 11 years, this rate has dropped, but still more than one out of every five children living in nonmetro areas is poor.

Persistence of Poverty

An important dimension of poverty is time. An area that has a high level of poverty this year, but not next year, is likely better off than an area that has a high level of poverty in both years. In order to shed light on this aspect of poverty, ERS has defined counties as being persistently poor if 20 percent or more of their populations were living in poverty over the last 30 years (measured by the 1970, 1980, 1990 and 2000 decennial censuses). To obtain the persistent poverty code and other county codes, see 2004 County Typology Codes. Using this definition, there are 386 persistently poor counties in the United States (comprising 12 percent of all U.S. counties and 4 percent of the U.S. population). The large majority (340 of 386) of the persistent poverty counties are nonmetro counties. An indication that persistent poverty is more pervasive in more rural areas can be seen by noting that 4 percent of the metro counties, 13 percent of the micropolitan counties (the more urbanized nonmetro counties), and 18 percent of the noncore, nonmetro counties (the most rural of nonmetro counties) were persistent poverty counties. See New Definitions in 2003 for definitions of metro, micro, and noncore. Persistent poverty also demonstrates a strong regional pattern. There are no persistent poverty counties in the Northeast and only 60 of the nonmetro persistent poverty counties are in the Midwest and West. The remaining 280 nonmetro persistent poverty counties are in the South, comprising just over 25 percent of the total Southern nonmetro population.

A map shows nonmetro and metro persistent poverty counties. Click for more information.

Rural Poverty and County Types

Poverty also varies by county type, with the most urbanized counties having the lowest rates. Metro counties are commonly characterized as densely populated central cities and suburbs, and nonmetro counties as sparsely populated small towns and open countryside. This distinction oversimplifies the many differences across metro and nonmetro areas. Some metro counties have relatively small populations and are adjacent to rural areas, and some nonmetro counties contain urban areas but still qualify as nonmetro. A more comprehensive classification—separating metro areas into highly and less-urbanized counties (using metro area population as cutoffs) and categorizing nonmetro areas by degree of urbanization and adjacency to metro areas—reveals important differences in poverty. For more details on the county classification, see 2003 Rural-Urban Continuum Codes. The poverty rate is the highest in the completely rural counties (not adjacent to metro counties), with 16.8 percent of the population poor, and it is the lowest in the largest metro areas, with 11.5 percent of the population poor. Persistent poverty and degree of rurality are also linked. Nearly 28 percent of the people living in completely rural counties live in persistent poverty counties. In contrast, 7.5 percent of the people living in the most urban nonmetro areas live in persistent poverty counties.

 

For more information, contact: Robert Gibbs

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: November 10, 2004