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Salt Lake City-Ogden, UT

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POVERTY BY AGE

While they say little about economic ups and downs in the decade between Censuses, income and poverty data provide us with economic "snapshots" of an area at the time of enumeration that can in turn be compared with economic data gathered from earlier Censuses. Poverty status, as measured in this chart, is determined by Poverty Thresholds, which take into account a number of factors, including income and family size and structure. For example, the 2000 Poverty Threshold for a family of four in the continental United States with two related children was 17,463. However, Poverty Thresholds are misleading because they do not provide an accurate picture of what a “poor” family’s life is like. According to the National Center for Children in poverty, most families of four would have to make twice their assigned Poverty Threshold in order to provide their children with basic necessities, such as housing, food, and health care.

Poverty by Age, 1990 and 2000
1990 2000
Number Percent Number Percent
Total Population* 1,058,281 100.00% 1,314,202 100.00%
In Poverty 99,667 9.42% 100,720 7.66%
Not in Poverty 958,614 90.58% 1,213,482 92.34%
11 Years and Under 260,921 24.66% 274,982 20.92%
In Poverty 32,229 3.05% 26,983 2.05%
Not in Poverty 228,692 21.61% 247,999 18.87%
12 to 17 Years 116,902 11.05% 136,875 10.42%
In Poverty 10,427 0.99% 10,728 0.82%
Not in Poverty 106,475 10.06% 126,147 9.60%
18 to 64 Years 593,596 56.09% 795,817 60.56%
In Poverty 50,358 4.76% 57,409 4.37%
Not in Poverty 543,238 51.33% 738,408 56.19%
65 Years and Above 86,862 8.21% 106,528 8.11%
In Poverty 6,653 0.63% 5,600 0.43%
Not in Poverty 80,209 7.58% 100,928 7.68%

* The total population is the population for which poverty status is determined. Therefore, the total in this table should not be expected to match the total population in the population growth topic.

Source: Census 2000 analyzed by the Social Science Data Analysis Network (SSDAN).

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