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  6. Losing Ground: Income and Poverty in Upstate New York, 1980-2000

Losing Ground: Income and Poverty in Upstate New York, 1980-2000

File(s)
DataDemographicsHistory__Losing_Ground.pdf (467.7 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/73412
Collections
Buffalo Commons
Author
Pendall, Rolf
Christopherson, Susan
Abstract

Over the past several decades, Upstate New York has transitioned from a stable middle-income region to one with serious income and economic problems. In 1969, per capita personal income (PCPI) in Upstate exceeded that of the United States, but by 2000, it trailed the national average by 11 percent. These lagging incomes likely contribute to the substantial out-migration of mobile residents from the area—especially in the mid-1990s—which in turn is threatening economic growth. At the same time, many of those who stay increasingly lack the resources to pay for goods and services that other U.S. residents enjoy, further exacerbating economic stagnation in the region. Both of these trends—population decline and economic malaise—are the subjects of other recent reports in this series.

Date Issued
2004-09-01
Keywords
Buffalo
•
Poverty/Low Wage Work/Income Inequality
•
Data/Demographics/History
•
Demographics and Data
•
General
•
Report
•
Other
•
Equality/Civil Rights
•
Criminal Justice
•
Government
Type
article

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