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For more, visit the StateImpact NH website.StateImpact Reporters Amanda Loder and Emily Corwin travel the state to report on how business and economic issues affect you. Read reports and listen to her on NPR member stations.StateImpact New Hampshire is a collaboration of New Hampshire Public Radio and NPR.

Thirty Years Of Low Child And Senior Poverty In NH

We’re all about cool maps at StateImpact, and we just couldn’t resist sharing this one on the changing face of child and senior poverty over the past 30 years.  Demographer Kenneth Johnson at the Carsey Institute recently crunched some 2010 Census data, and working with a team at USA Today, came up with a cool county-by-county visualization.  (We can’t embed the map here, because it’s proprietary, but we promise you, it’s well worth the visit.)  By dragging a bar across the map, you can see which areas had child and/or senior poverty rates above 20 percent in 1980 and 2010.

The map clearly illustrates three stories about youth and elder poverty over the past 30 years:

  1. The number of counties with senior poverty rates over 20 percent has gone down significantly.
  2. The number of counties with child poverty rates over 20 percent has gone up significantly.
  3. New Hampshire’s socio-economic landscape has remained relatively consistent over the past three decades, at least in terms of the oldest and youngest people.  No county in the 1980 or 2010 Census registered poverty rates among the young or old over 20 percent.

 

Copyright 2021 StateImpact New Hampshire. To see more, visit StateImpact New Hampshire.

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