Michigan is a well renowned state in the United States with a good standard of living but what people don’t know about Michigan is that 8 percent of the children in Michigan live in extreme poverty. Michigan has an income below 50 percent of the poverty level.
Unlike other countries, children in Michigan are more likely to live in poverty than other individuals of the same group. Overtime, there has been a bigger increase in the number and percentage of poor children under the age of 18 in Michigan.Poverty in Michigan has increased to a big 66 percent since 2001. 3.4ths of the rise in poverty in Michigan started before the recession started in 2008.
The poverty rate in Michigan began to rise through 2011 to 17.5 percent up to 16.8 percent just a year ago.
According to statistics, nearly 1 in 4 children in Michigan live in poverty. The child poverty increased to 24.4 percent in 2011, up from 23.1 percent in 2010 and about 14.2 percent in 2001.
Nearly 13 other states, all in the United States South or South West had a child poverty rate even higher.
Other statistics show that 15.4 percent of Michigan’s children that are under age 18 live in poverty. Moreover, Michigan has brought a big decline in its child poverty rate by about 30 percent since 1993.
The poverty statistics therefore have been really high. The unemployment insurance kept 2.3 million Americans from falling in poverty till the last year and it kept 3.2 million from falling in poverty. However, it is important to note that without proper insurance, the number will climb to 3 million by April.
Therefore, it has been established that preventing child poverty is extremely important because there are some serious impact of poverty on the well being of children. Children who live in poverty are more likely to be in the middle or high income to go through material deprivation and poor health. Moreover, children who live in poverty go through the following:
Have out of wedlock births They experience serious crime
They suffer from serious undesirable results
The issue of child poverty is a serious one in Michigan. Michigan’s success child poverty rate in the mid-late 1990s indicates that policies, states, locals all have a serious impact on the overall well-being of children.
On the other hand, it is also important to prevent child poverty in Michigan. There are certain serious impacts of the impact of poverty on the wellbeing of children. Children who tend to live in poverty are more likely to go through serious consequences than middle-high income families.
Poverty has severely increased social distress and therefore Michigan is trying their best to gut and not expand all last resort safety net programs. In the state of Michigan, more and more states are cutting assistance programs and the official poverty rate misses the declines in real income from budget cuts. Thus overall, the official poverty level has failed to reflect the increasing distress that the low-income families are going through as benefits such as food stamps and others are being cut.
Poverty is a serious concern. The detrimental effects of poverty have been seen in many different studies. The studies show that children who are going through poverty are going to suffer and experience many different problems such as poor health, material deprivation and they will also tend to drop out of school.
The other statistics show that:
• Income inequality has continuously grown and the percentage of households making has increased by 5 percent. On the other hand, the middle income household has declined
- Contrarily, low households are making less income- about $35000 per year
- Moreover, the biggest income increase in Michigan were in the lowest incomecohorts which were just below $15,000
- Children represent a big share of the poor in the US. There is about 24 percent of the population that is poor but 36 percent of the population in general is poor. Moreover, in the year 2010, 16.4 million children or about 22 percent were poor. The poverty rate for children has increased and the table shows that about all the children under 18 was living under poverty. On the contrary, 12.4 percent of the people in 2010 were white. Moreover, 38.2 percent of the black children in 2010 were living in poverty and 13.6 percent of the Asians were living under the same poverty conditions.Poverty, therefore, is a serious concern in Michigan’s and the numbers are invariably increasing. The poverty rate for all the people and of all age groups has risen but the one slot that is actually living under poverty are children.