What is considered poor varies greatly. Direct from the US Census website (
here, emphasis mine):
They are intended for use as a statistical yardstick,
not as a complete description of what people and families need to live.
Further, the problem I find with metrics like this is that they aren’t defined consistently. Again, from the same website
Authority Behind Official Poverty Measure
The official measure of poverty was established by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in
Statistical Policy Directive 14
To be used by federal agencies in their statistical work.
Government aid programs do not have to use the official poverty measure as eligibility criteria.
Official poverty data come from the Current Population Survey (CPS) Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC), formerly called the Annual Demographic Supplement or simply the “March Supplement.”
So, not all government organizations use the same metric. So how are we to know who is really poor and what kind of benefits they are eligible for? Indeed, even the OMB redefined the poverty level in 1980 (follow the link to Directive 14).
And finally, what bothers me is that the government gets to decide what the poverty level is. It seems that this is the purview of the agency that needs the metric, which is at the whim of executive’s appointees. So, if the HHS secretary wants to look good, they can re-define the poverty line to make poverty during their tenure good, but bad for his/her predecessor. I’d prefer to see some 3rd party analysis of the poverty level, and how its applied across all time frames.