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Ohio:: Snapshot of Poverty, Income, and Health Insurance Coverage

The document summarizes poverty, income, and health insurance data from 2010 for Ohio based on Census Bureau surveys. It finds that from 2009 to 2010, Ohio's poverty and extreme poverty rates increased significantly, median household income declined significantly, and the number of uninsured rose, though not significantly. From 1999 to 2010, all of these measures significantly worsened. The effects of the recession on unemployment, income, and safety nets are still negatively impacting many Ohioans.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
105 views4 pages

Ohio:: Snapshot of Poverty, Income, and Health Insurance Coverage

The document summarizes poverty, income, and health insurance data from 2010 for Ohio based on Census Bureau surveys. It finds that from 2009 to 2010, Ohio's poverty and extreme poverty rates increased significantly, median household income declined significantly, and the number of uninsured rose, though not significantly. From 1999 to 2010, all of these measures significantly worsened. The effects of the recession on unemployment, income, and safety nets are still negatively impacting many Ohioans.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Snapshot of Poverty, Income, and Health Insurance Coverage

Ohio:

2010 data from the U.S. Census Bureaus American Community Survey
Social IMPACT Research Center, a program of Heartland Alliance September 22, 2011 (version 1)

The newly released data from the U.S. Census Bureaus American Community Survey provide a glimpse of the ongoing impacts of the Great Recession for millions of individuals and families. This snapshot of your communitys data includes a comparison of 2010 data to 2009 and 1999, illustrating trends over time. Fact sheets for additional geographies are available at http://www.heartlandalliance.org/research/current-and-local-data/local-fact-sheets.html.

overview

The effects of the Great Recession on unemployment, poverty, and income are still being felt by millions of individuals and families, and the eroding safety net means that while there are more people in need, there are fewer resources to help them. Preserving, extending, and strengthening these solutions can help keep more people from falling into poverty and help those struggling to meet their basic needs: Fund safety net and benefit programs such as SNAP (food stamps), TANF, Medicaid, and the Earned Income Tax Credit, which help poor and near-poor individuals and families bridge the gap between low incomes and meeting their most basic needs. These programs not only help reduce poverty, but also generate additional economic activity in local communities. Continue Unemployment Insurance for those seeking employment, which will help protect people who are out of work and keep families out of poverty. Invest in subsidized and transitional employment programs to help disadvantaged workers and struggling businesses weather the stalled economy and create jobs that will put people back to work and that pay living wages.

The poverty rate rose from 15.2% in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. The poverty rate rose from 10.6% in 1999, which is a statistically significant change.

poverty

Poverty Rate in 2010: 15.8%

Ohio Poverty Rates Over Time


20

15

The number of people in poverty rose from 1,709,971 in 2009, which is not a statistically significant change. The number of people in poverty rose from 1,170,698 in 1999, which is a statistically significant change.

Number in Poverty in 2010: 1,779,032

10

1999

2007 2008 2009 2010

3 3 We s t G r a n d Av e n u e , S u i t e 5 0 0 | C h i c a g o , I l l i n o i s 6 0 6 5 4 | 3 1 2 . 8 7 0 . 4 9 4 9 | r e s e a r c h @ h e a r t l a n d a l l i a n c e . o r g

Ohio

extreme poverty
Ohio Extreme Poverty Rates Over Time
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0

The extreme poverty rate rose from 7.0% in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. The extreme poverty rate rose from 4.8% in 1999, which is a statistically significant change.

Extreme Poverty Rate in 2010: 7.3%

Number in Extreme Poverty in 2010: 823,208

1999 2007 2008 2009 2010


In 2010, a family of three was considered extremely poor if their annual income was below $8,687.

Extreme poverty is defined as half the poverty line or 50% FPL.

The number of people in extreme poverty rose from 782,615 in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. The number of people in extreme poverty rose from 530,076 in 1999, which is a statistically significant change.

income
Median Household Income in 2010: $45,090
Median household income declined by 2.3% from $46,144 in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. Median household income declined by 15.9% from $53,593 in 1999, which is a statistically significant change. Ohio Median Household Income Over Time
55000 53000 51000 49000 47000 45000 43000

child poverty
The child poverty rate rose from 21.5% in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. The child poverty rate rose from 14.0% in 1999, which is a statistically significant change.

Child Poverty Rate in 2010: 23.0%

Number of Children in Poverty in 2010: 611,697


The number of children in poverty rose from 571,579 in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. The number of children in poverty rose from 396,540 in 1999, which is a statistically significant change.

All prior years income data have been updated to 2010 dollars.

1999

2007 2008

2009

2010

Child poverty reflects children who are related to their household head.

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Ohio

low income
The low income rate rose from 17.7% in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. The low income rate rose from 15.8% in 1999, which is a statistically significant change.

Low Income Rate in 2010: 18.8%

The number of people with low incomes rose from 1,990,213 in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. The number of people with low incomes rose from 1,749,160 in 1999, which is a statistically significant change.

Number with Low Incomes in 2010: 2,107,710

In 2010, a family of three was considered low income if their annual income was between $17,374 and $34,748.
Low income is defined as above the poverty line but below twice the poverty line. or 100-199% FPL.

health insurance coverage


Ohio Health Insurance Coverage, 2010
80 Uninsured Public Private

Percent of Non-Elderly

70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0

The uninsured rate rose from 14.0% in 2009, which is not a statistically significant change.

Uninsured Rate in 2010: 14.2%

Number of Uninsured in 2010: 1,391,515

The number of people without health insurance rose from 1,375,865 in 2009, which is not a statistically significant change.

Health insurance data reflect the civilian, non-institutionalized population under 65 years old; sum of uninsured, privately, and publicly insured percents do not add up to 100 because for certain populations it is possible have both public and private coverage.

69.2% are covered by private insurance. 19.8% are covered by public insurance. 14.2% are uninsured.

Type of Insurance in 2010:

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Ohio

workers
Median Earnings for Female Full-Time Year-Round Workers in 2010: $35,284
Womens earnings rose by 3.3% from $34,171 in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. Womens earnings rose by 2.1% from $34,545 in 1999, which is a statistically significant change. Ohio Change in Median Earnings of FullTime, Year-Round Workers 4 Women 3 Women 2 Men

Median Earnings for Male Full-Time YearRound Workers in 2010: $45,859

Mens earnings rose by 1.2% from $45,299 in 2009, which is a statistically significant change. Mens earnings declined by 7.0% from $49,322 in 1999, which is a statistically significant change.

1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 -6 -7 -8

Percent Change

Men
Change 09-10 Change 99-10

In 2010, women earned $0.77 for every $1.00 earned by men.

measuring poverty
Official poverty data are based on the federal poverty thresholds, which are used to determine poverty status. The measure is not geographically specific and does not reflect what it takes for families to make ends meet.

2010 Federal Poverty Thresholds


Family Size 1 2 3 4 Poverty Threshold $11,139 $14,218 $17,374 $22,314

What does it really take to make ends meet?

All data are derived from the U.S. Census Bureaus American Community Survey and from the 2000 Decennial Census. The American Community Survey recently released estimates on 2010 income, poverty, and health insurance coverage, which are the most current data available for geographies with populations over 65,000. For more information on the American Community Survey, visit www.census.gov/ acs/www/. Statistical significance refers to the probability that the observed changes are true rather than the result of an error in sampling or estimation. Data included here are statistically significant at the 90th percentile. For more information on the Illinois Self-Sufficiency Standard, visit http://www.heartlandalliance.org/research/illinois-self-sufficiency-standard/. The Social IMPACT Research Center (IMPACT) is a nonprofit organization that investigates todays most pressing social issues and solutions to inform and equip those working toward a just global society. IMPACT, a program of Heartland Alliance for Human Needs & Human Rights, provides research, policy analysis, consulting, technical assistance, communications, and coalition building to projects in Illinois, the Midwest, and nationally. Visit www.heartlandalliance.org/research to learn more.

Far more people struggle to make ends meet than the official poverty data suggest. Most experts agree that it takes around twice as much income as the federal poverty threshold for families to get by and meet their most basic needs.

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