25 Poorest Cities In The US That Are Getting Poorer

In This Article:

In this article, we look at the 25 poorest cities in the US that are getting poorer, or growing at the slowest rate. You can skip our detailed analysis of the causes of poverty in these cities and head directly to the 10 Poorest Cities In The US That Are Getting Poorer.

A recent analysis on the 50 Poorest Cities in Every State in the US identified the poorest city in each state in the United States, using last 12 months’ poverty data released by the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2021 American Community Survey. Among them are cities which, although have the highest poverty rates in their respective states, are taking strides in the right direction and experiencing an increase in median household income. One such example is Providence in Rhode Island, where median income earned by an average household has increased 13.7% from $49,065 in 2020 to $55,787 in 2021. Residents of Lake Charles City, Louisiana and North Charleston City in South Carolina have also seen their household income rise by over 10%.

At the same time, there are cities that are growing at far slower rates, and some even getting poorer with their income levels shrinking. Pharr is the poorest city in Texas. More than 40% of its population is living below the poverty line, and the city’s median household income in 2021 had shrunk by more than 2% compared to the previous year.

Poverty in the United States affects nearly 38 million people. About 11.6% of the population is living below the poverty line set at $27,479 for a family of four individuals. The communities that are most affected, in order, are Native Americans, African Americans, and Hispanics. Midland, San Jose, San Francisco, Seattle, and Princeton are the five richest cities in the United States. Whereas, Pharr, Lakewood, Bloomington, Jackson, and Kalamazoo are among the poorest cities in the country.

The country is divided by its stark income inequality which is one of the major causes of poverty. According to the 12th edition of The State of Working America published by the Economic Policy Institute, the United States experienced extraordinarily unequal income and wage growth between 1979 and 2007. Wages grew by 156% for the richest one percent of the population, in complete contrast with a mere 17% for the 90% of the people who were at the lower end of the spectrum. Economic mobility has been on the decline as well. More than two-thirds of sons born to fathers in the bottom fifth of earnings distribution end up in the bottom two-fifths; only 18% of them reach the top two-fifths. A report in 2022 quoting the Federal Reserve stated that America’s wealthiest people, the top 1% of the population, owned 32.3% of the nation’s wealth. The bottom 90% hold a smaller share, at 30.2%.