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The Effects of the Recession on Child Poverty

Already high child poverty rates are expected to increase with the recession. In 2008, on average, nearly one in five children lived in poverty, but some states, particularly those in the South, had rates as high as 30 percent. Julia Isaacs uses increases in the use of the food assistance program to predict that child poverty rates in 2009 will be particularly high in nine states in the South and Southwest.

Posted in: Grey Literature on 02/23/2011 | Link to this post on IFP |
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