Published Nov-23-2009
These figures come from the Bureau of Labor Statistics' (BLS) annual Profile of the Working Poor.
Those who were usually employed part time were more likely to be among the working poor. The working poor rate was 3.6 percent for those workers who were usually employed full time, while it was 11.9 percent for those usually employed part time.
Younger people were more likely to be poor. The working poor rate by age group peaks at 10.6 percent for those ages 20 to 24, and then declines with each successive age group.
Nationally, more women were considered working poor than men in 2007, at 3.9 million and 3.6 million respectively. In addition, women who head families were more than twice as likely to be among the working poor as men who head families.
Workers with higher levels of education are less likely to be among the working poor. Very few college graduates who were in the labor force for 27 weeks or more in 2007 were among the working poor (1.3%), while 16.5 percent of those with less than a high school diploma fit this description.
While a majority of the working poor were usual full-time workers, these workers only accounted for 3.6 percent of all workers who usually work full time. In contrast, 11.9 percent of usual part-time workers fit the description of the working poor. For voluntary part-time workers, the working poor rate is 8.9 percent, but the rate skyrockets for involuntary part-time workers, where the working poor account for nearly one-quarter (23.8%) of all involuntary part-time workers.
Being in the labor force the entire year means lower working poor rates for most groups. In total, the working poor rate for those in the labor force 50 to 52 weeks is 4.6 percent, compared to 5.1 percent for those in the labor force at least 27 weeks. The only group with a higher working poor rate for those in the labor force all year is people involuntarily working part time - for that group those in the labor force 50 to 52 weeks had a working poor rate of 24.1 percent, slightly above the 23.8 percent rate for those in the labor force 27 weeks or more.
Women are more likely to be among the working poor than men. Overall, women's rate was 5.8 percent in 2007, while men's rate was 4.6 percent. For those 45 to 54 years of age, however, women's working poor rate is one-tenth of a percentage point below that of men; women's rate is higher than men's in every other age group.
Men have a perfect inverse relationship between age and the working poor rate. Men ages 16 to 19 have the highest rate, at 10.0 percent, and then the rate drops with each successive age group. Among women, however, the highest working poor rate is for those 20 to 24 years of age, at 13.5 percent - above the 10.4 percent rate for women ages 16 to 19.
Married-couple families are the least likely of all family types to be among the working poor, with a rate of 3.5 percent overall. Those with children under 18 years have a higher rate, 5.5 percent, than those without children present (1.3%).
Families maintained by women have a much higher rate than average - 18.2 percent were among the working poor in 2007. The rate surges to more than one-quarter (24.7%) for these families when children under 18 are present. Without children, families maintained by women have an average working poor rate (5.1%).
While families maintained by men have a higher rate than married-couple families, it doesn't come close to the rate for families maintained by women. Overall, 8.5 percent of families maintained by men were among the working poor in 2007. Just like with other groups, rates are higher for families with children under 18; 11.6 percent of these families were among the working poor, while just 4.9 percent of those without children fell into that category.
Men have lower working poor rates at almost all levels of education. The one exception is among those who completed less than one year of high school (not shown separately in Graph 3), where men had a working poor rate of 18.8 percent, while women with the same level of education had a rate of 17.4 percent.
The gender difference is least apparent among those with a bachelor's or higher degree. These women had a working poor rate of 1.4 percent, very similar to men's 1.2 percent. Working poor rates of those with associate degrees are also fairly similar, with women's rate at 3.2 percent and men's rate at 2.4 percent.
It is also likely that the number involuntarily working part time will surge in 2008 and 2009, as full-time work becomes scarcer.



