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Bagi, Faqir S.; Reeder, Richard J.; Calhoun, Samuel D. – Rural America, 2002
One third of rural Appalachian counties are distressed. Central Appalachia has particularly high poverty, unemployment, and dropout rates. Appalachia received more per capita federal funds than the U.S. average, but only in urban areas. Appalachia received less than average funding for community resources and human resources, which create jobs and…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Federal Aid, Poverty, Poverty Areas
Reeder, Richard J.; Calhoun, Samuel D. – Rural America, 2002
The Lower Mississippi Delta region, especially the rural Delta, faces many economic challenges. The rural Delta has received much federal aid in basic income support and funding for human resource development, but less for community resource programs, which are important for economic development. Federal aid to the Delta is analyzed in terms of…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Federal Aid, Low Income Counties, Poverty
Jolliffe, Dean – Rural America, 2002
In 2000 the nonmetro poverty rate was 13.4 percent, the lowest level on record; was 2.8 percentage points higher than the metro rate; and was highest in the West and the South, which also had the largest rural-urban disparities. The nonmetro child poverty rate was 19 percent, compared to 13 percent for nonelderly adults, a persistent disparity for…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Children, Family Structure, Geographic Regions
Rogers, Carolyn C.; Dagata, Elizabeth – Rural America, 2000
Draws on the 1998 Current Population Survey to examine the poverty status and welfare recipient status of rural and urban children under 18 to inform policymakers about potential effects of welfare reform. Discusses the effects of rural versus urban residence, region, household type, race, parental age, parental education, and parental employment…
Descriptors: Children, Economically Disadvantaged, Family Characteristics, Place of Residence
Rogers, Carolyn C. – Rural America, 2001
Poverty rates increased in the early 1990s, but between 1994 and 1999 the metro child poverty rate declined 6 percentage points and the nonmetro rate declined 4 percent. In 1999, the poverty rate for nonmetro Black children was about double that of nonmetro White children, but the Black-White gap in poverty narrowed between 1985 and 1999. (TD)
Descriptors: Blacks, Child Welfare, Children, Demography
Lichter, Daniel T.; Jensen, Leif – Rural America, 2001
Rural poverty among female-headed families with children has declined since 1996 welfare reforms. Moreover, the income of female-headed families has increased, while income from earnings has more than offset declines in public assistance income. Rural single mothers nevertheless continue to experience higher poverty rates than their urban…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Employed Women, Employment, Fatherless Family
Gibbs, Robert – Rural America, 2001
The South's recent rapid growth has not erased its widespread poverty and low levels of human capital. The rural South remains the nation's low-income and high-poverty region, and low education levels may limit the rural South's prospects for development. Underlying social and economic conditions that depend on and reinforce a low-skill population…
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Development, Educational Attainment, Educational Needs