Child poverty in America has dropped by more than 80% since 1993.
The child poverty rate was 27.9% in 1993, but fell to a record low of 5.2% in 2021, according to new census data. Growing up poor affects every facet of adult life, from health to wealth.
- "Fewer children growing up in poverty is good for the future," says Renee Ryberg, a co-author of a new report from Child Trends that digs into the data. "It's as simple as that."
- Not only are there immediate improvements to the well-being of kids and families, there are also long-term benefits for society, like lower rates of crime, lower health care costs and more tax revenue.
- Academics and advocates have raised concerns that some of those additional gains may be erased now that the expanded child tax credit has expired.
- They include lower unemployment, state-level minimum wage increases, a rise in single mothers' participation in the workforce, and expansions of the safety net, the New York Times reports.
- The child poverty rate has decreased in every state.
- And it's fallen by about the same amount for Black kids, white kids, Hispanic kids, Asian kids, immigrants, and kids in one- or two-parent households.
Still, many of the driving factors behind the drop in child poverty are longer term.
The big picture: The reduction in child poverty has affected all poor kids in the U.S., per the Child Trends report.
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