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Why poverty is rising faster in US suburbs

Scott W Allard, Washington DC, USA

June 1, 2018

In the US, the geography of poverty is shifting.

According to a May report from the Pew Research Center, since 2000, suburban counties have experienced sharper increases in poverty than urban or rural counties.

This is consistent with research across the US over the past decade, as well as my own book, “Places in Need.”

Important demographic trend

The suburbanisation of poverty is one of the most important demographic trends of the last 50 years. Poverty rates across the suburban landscape have increased by 50% since 1990.

The number of suburban residents living in high poverty areas has almost tripled in that time.

These new trends are not just occurring in the wake of the Great Recession.

In 1990, there were nearly as many poor people in the suburbs of the largest 100 US metropolitan areas as within the cities of those metros, even though poverty rates historically have been much higher in cities.

The reasons

Why is poverty rising faster in suburbs than in cities? There are many reasons.

Population growth in suburbs plays a part. The US has become a suburban nation.

However, that is not the most important factor.

My research finds that suburban poverty is growing three times faster than population size in suburban communities across the country.

Labour Market changes

As in cities and rural communities, poverty is rising in suburbs because of the changing nature of the labour market.

For those in low-skill jobs, earnings have stayed flat for the last 40 years.

In most suburbs, unemployment rates were twice as high in 2014 as in 1990.

Good-paying jobs that do not require advanced training have started to disappear in suburbs, just as they did in central cities more than a quarter century ago.

These national employment trends have contributed to rising poverty everywhere, but the impact has been particularly acute in suburbs, where there are a large percentage of workers without advanced education or vocational training.

Surprising implications

Rising suburban poverty has surprising implications for the safety net.

Many suburbs lack the resources needed to respond to growing poverty.

For example, I have found that the typical urban county spends nearly 10 times as much on human service programmes per low-income person as the typical suburban county.

Some suggestions

First, the US must maintain federal funding of safety net programmes like food stamps, which are effective at reducing poverty.

Increasing public funding of human service programmes also will help to support those weathering a spell of unemployment or seeking to advance in the labour market.

Communities must find ways to cultivate a new generation of local leaders and non-profit organisations capable of tackling suburban poverty challenges.

Finally, poverty problems continue to rise, albeit at slower rates, in cities and rural communities.

Across geographic boundaries, the nation has a shared interest in the fight against poverty.

If we cannot come together on this issue, we will not be successful in that fight in any one place – urban, rural or suburban.

Scott W Allard is Professor of Social Policy, University of Washington. A Disclosure Statement said that he received research grants supporting his work on social welfare policy from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), Food and Nutrition Service (FNS), US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the Russell Sage Foundation, The Brookings Institution’s Metropolitan Policy Programme, The New York Community Trust, the University of Kentucky Center for Poverty Research (UKCPR), the University of Wisconsin’s IRP, and the Rural Policy Research Institute (RUPRI). He is a non-resident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Programme. The above article, which appeared under ‘The Conversation’ (USA) on June 1, 2018, has been reproduced here under ‘Creative Commons Licence.’

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