The World Mind

American University's Undergraduate Foreign Policy Magazine

A Case to Update How America Measures Poverty

Hannah Kandall

Millions of Americans experience poverty each day. The idea to measure poverty for the purpose of allocating government resources came about in the 1960’s during Lyndon B. Johnson’s “War on Poverty.” The Office of Economic Opportunity needed a statistical measurement and relied on Mollie Orshansky at the Social Security Administration to provide that equation. In 1967, the United States government officially adopted Orshansky’s measurement as the Official Poverty Measure. With this measure, the government created a threshold of who – based on income – qualifies as experiencing poverty and who does not. The Poverty Threshold is the minimum amount of income needed to avoid poverty, and that threshold can vary for families of different sizes, ages, and members. However, for each size of a family, the threshold throughout the U.S. is constant. For example, in 2018 the Poverty Threshold for a single person was $13,064, but that number will alter when evaluating a family of four. The measurements and subsequent thresholds are used to determine eligibility for government services and track trends in poverty. However, there has been little change to how poverty is measured in the United States since the 1960’s, despite how greatly the nation’s economic context has changed. Therefore, poverty in the United States has been mismeasured for years. There are changes that can be made to the poverty measurement in order to account for needs in the 21st century, and to include those who were previously excluded from the equation.

The Current Poverty Measurement

The measurement that President Johnson’s administration created compared pre-tax income of a family unit to three times the minimum food basket of 1963. To gauge the economic makeup of the country, the Official Poverty Measurement draws upon data from the Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement, where 100,000 households are surveyed annually during the months of February, March, and April. However, the income that is calculated within the poverty measurement is not just income earned from work. According to the United States Census Bureau, income can include: “Earnings, Unemployment compensation, Worker’s Compensation, Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, Public Assistance, Veteran’s Payments, Survivor Benefits, Pensions, Interest, Dividends, Rents, Royalties, Income on estates, Trusts, Educational assistance, Alimony, Child support, and other qualifying sources. Qualifying income in comparison to the average annual cost of food is adjusted for inflation using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPRI Urban), meaning that “it measures the changes in the price basket of goods and services purchased by all urban customers.” Therefore, changes in an urban family’s regular spending habits are accounted for, but expensive expenditures and geographic diversity are not.

This measurement accounts for 88% of the United States population but does not adequately account for sudden and costly expenditures: such as healthcare.  However, some analysts suggest adjusting poverty measurements to the Chain Consumer Price Index. The Peter G. Peterson Foundation “argues that the chained CPI provides a more accurate estimate of the changes in the cost of living by reducing the substitution bias, which occurs when consumers substitute one good for another as prices rise.”  The Chained CPI reflects what people buy before and after a price change, and therefore can provide a more accurate estimate of poverty in the United States based on how people are able to withstand economic changes: to not fall under the poverty threshold.

Gaps in the Official Poverty Measurement

The current threshold is created based upon if a family falls above or below the Official Poverty Measure. One’s total income is taken and divided by the threshold. While this measure heavily relies on food, it is not an adequate representative of how a family in 2022 allocates their funds. The Annie E. Casey Foundation notes that while families previously spent one-third of their budget on food in 1963, it is certainly not the case anymore as housing; utility; and technological cost put a heavier burden on American families. Due to holes in the poverty measurement itself, poverty within the United States is under-estimated and therefore excludes many individuals from obtaining fiscal assistance.

One reason that poverty is under-estimated in the United States is that many people experiencing poverty are ignored in official government measurements. When calculating pre-tax income, non-family housemates are calculated separately than the rest of the family, skewing the scale of need. Furthermore, those in institutions such as prisons, nursing homes, college dormitories, military barracks, foster homes, and experiencing homelessness are not surveyed at all in the poverty measurement: leaving out many who are in need. Additionally, the measurement fails to gage the depth of income. The Official Poverty Measurement has not kept pace with the changes in healthcare policies, tax regulations, and other laws. Furthermore, it fails to account for other social programs families receive such as the Child Tax Credit and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). However, one of the core issues opponents note with the Official Poverty Measurement is how there is no variation amongst geographic regions. The cost of living in a rural area is not the same as in a city. For this reason, the lack of geographic variation within the poverty measurement is one of its main faults.

Supplemental Poverty Measure

The federal government has known about gaps in the Official Poverty Measure since only a few years after it was created. However, research is conducted continuously in order to keep up with a rapidly changing economy. In 1970, members of the Census Bureau, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the Department of Health and Human Services formed the Interagency Poverty Task Force to re-evaluate how the United States measures poverty. In 1990, the National Academies of Sciences met again to evaluate the true scope of poverty in the United States. After finding a higher rate of poverty than the Official Poverty Measurement, the Supplemental Poverty Measurement was created. The Supplemental Poverty Measurement accounts for modern needs in a way that the Official Poverty Measurement does not. It includes expenses for food, clothing, shelter, and utilities. Additionally, the equation makes geographic adjustments and benefits, which is one of the core issues with the original measure. The equation adds cash income and non-cash benefits and subtracts work expenses; medical expenses, and child support from the previous total.

However, this new equation is not a full-proof solution. First, the Supplemental Poverty Measure does not account for the value of benefits. For example, one’s housing unit may not be stable, and access to healthcare does not mean that an individual has a comprehensive plan. Another concern is that the new measurement is prone to human error due to its base in a family’s spending habits and its data collection method. It is based on survey results, which may not be accurate. The American Enterprise Institute suggests that a new poverty measure “will use administrative data to improve the accuracy of survey responses, include a fuller set of resources, reflect actual spending, and recognize some of the issues regarding poverty thresholds.” Finally, there are advantages to living in a high-cost urban area, such as access to more job opportunities and diverse culture. Overall, the concerns with the Supplemental Poverty Measure come from the quality of living being quantified.

Despite its errors, the Supplemental Poverty Measure takes steps closer to truly understanding poverty in the United States. It accounts for a family’s average expenditures over five years, rather than annually. With knowing how many people  and expenditures are excluded from the Official Poverty Measure, the higher poverty rate the new methodology uncovers is widely accepted as a more realistic measure. Furthermore, it gives critical insight to social and economic patterns to further understand how poverty touches American lives.

Moving Forward

Four out of every ten Americans cannot financially manage a $400 emergency such as an ambulance ride, flood, or car accident. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, 50 million Americans faced food insecurity, with that number rising since the start of the pandemic. With 43.3% of Americans identifying as poor or low-income, a measurement that under-estimates poverty makes it seem like an odd socio-economic phenomenon, further stigmatizing the experience: which is harmful.

In a modern economy, Americans pick up more than one job to keep their family above the poverty threshold. With food taking up less than a quarter of a household’s budget, a modern measure is needed to adapt to a changed economy. Shawn Fremstad, a senior policy fellow at the Center for Economic Policy and Research, states that “A better, more modern measure of poverty would set the threshold at half of median disposable income — that is, median income after taxes and transfers, adjusted for household size, a standard commonly used in other wealthy nation.” This is because median income changes faster than the rate of inflation, so a new measure based upon those estimates can keep up with the changing economy more than the current measurement can. Flexibility and inclusivity are key going forward.

Conclusion

An understanding of poverty in the United States is critical to create policy that helps those experiencing it. Policymakers need to recognize that poverty touches every aspect of an individual’s life, from housing to school and healthcare. A new and improved poverty measurement must consider the aforementioned different aspects of poverty, as well as the different groups of people experiencing it — such as those excluded from the Official Poverty Measurement and diverse geographic factors. Without a change in how poverty is measured, the standards of living for an individual can decline without acknowledgement, and they can be barred from crucial social programs. The poverty measure has a long and stagnant history in the American economy, and it is worth the effort to question where there is room for improvement, so more people can thrive.