Childhood Poverty and Lifelong Opportunity October 22, 2013 .
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Transcript of Childhood Poverty and Lifelong Opportunity October 22, 2013 .
Childhood Poverty and Lifelong Opportunity
October 22, 2013October 22, 2013
www.cahs.org
• Poverty in Connecticut: where we stand.
• Why the numbers are misleading.
• Why concentrated poverty matters.
• Policies and practices to break the cycle.
OverviewOverview
• If we look at the Kids Count profile of the state, Connecticut looks good.
• Doing really well on health, pretty well on education.
• Well above average on Community and Economic well being.
Childhood poverty in ConnecticutChildhood poverty in Connecticut
Some more detail:Some more detail:
Some more detail:Some more detail:
• Why is this relevant when talking about opportunity?– States with high child
poverty have less social mobility.
– By helping kids today, we have a state that creates more opportunities for all.
Current poverty affects opportunityCurrent poverty affects opportunity
An indicator to pay attention to:
Concentrated Poverty
Current poverty affects opportunityCurrent poverty affects opportunity
• Where you grow up has a huge effect on social mobility
• “The Equality of Opportunity Project” – Raj Chetty, Nathaniel Hendren, Patrick Kline, Emmanuel Saez
• Social mobility varies hugely by metro area in the U.S.
Why is this relevant?Why is this relevant?
Social mobility, by metro area:
Why is this relevant?Why is this relevant?
Researchers found is that the characteristics of the place you live in affects mobility.
Why is this relevant?Why is this relevant?
Positive factors
• Social capital• Two-parent
households• Quality Schools
Negative factors
• Income inequality• Income
segregation by neighborhood:
All else being equal, upward mobility tended to be higher in metropolitan
areas where poor families were more dispersed among mixed-income
neighborhoods.
Why is this relevant?Why is this relevant?
Barely any effect on social mobility• High taxes on
wealthy• Racial composition• Tax credits• Number of wealthy
people• Cost of higher
education
• A deeper look at our data:“Opportunity in Connecticut:
The impact of Race, Poverty and Education on Family Economic Success”
• CT might have the schools and social capital, but income segregation is very high.
What does this mean for Connecticut?What does this mean for Connecticut?
Not many poor, but very concentrated:
Concentrated Poverty in CTConcentrated Poverty in CT
Not many poor, but very concentrated:
Concentrated Poverty in CTConcentrated Poverty in CT
Concentrated Poverty in CTConcentrated Poverty in CT
Concentrated Poverty in CTConcentrated Poverty in CT
Hartford: an island of low opportunity surrounded by a sea of “progressive” communities.
• A bit out of scope of this presentation, but here is a hint…
Aside: how we concentrate poverty in Aside: how we concentrate poverty in CT?CT?
• Important factor to consider:– A low income non-
Hispanic white in Hartford has very similar social mobility to a low income Latino or Black
– Same with affluent Hispanics/Blacks in the suburbs.
– The issue is people of color tend to be poor, and tend to be concentrated in low income areas.
Race and mobilityRace and mobility
Concentrated poverty affects education…
Race and mobilityRace and mobility
Concentrated poverty affects education…
Race and mobilityRace and mobility
This translate to skills gaps…
Race and mobilityRace and mobility
Not just a city issue, though!
Race and mobilityRace and mobility
That is: racial inequality affects education outcomes
Race and mobilityRace and mobility
These outcomes extend to college…
Race and mobilityRace and mobility
• And this translates to income, as well
Race and mobilityRace and mobility
• And to assets:
Race and mobilityRace and mobility
Source: Corporation for Enterprise Development, US Census Data
• Children who are poor at birth are three times less likely to complete high school.
• Girls born poor are three times more likely to have a child as a teen.
• Only 1/3 of persistently poor boys will have consistent employment as adults. Only ½ of girls.
Cumulative lack of opportunityCumulative lack of opportunity
• “Scarcity” by Sendhil Mullainathan, a Harvard economist, and Eldar Shafir, a psychologist at Princeton.
• Why the poor are less future-oriented than those with more money?
• Scarcity — not of money, but of what the authors call bandwidth: the portion of our mental capacity that we can employ to make decisions.
Toxic stress and the cycle of scarcityToxic stress and the cycle of scarcity
• Low income families are forced to take decisions under stress constantly.
• They do so in communities without many choices.
• Concentrated poverty becomes self-reinforcing.
Toxic stress and the cycle of scarcityToxic stress and the cycle of scarcity
Connecticut is extremely unequal…
ReminderReminder
20102010RankRank StateState GiniGini
CoefficientCoefficient
51 District of Columbia 0.532
50 New York 0.499
49 Connecticut 0.486
47 Louisiana 0.475
47 Massachusetts 0.475
46 Florida 0.474
45 Alabama 0.472
44 California 0.471
43 Texas 0.469
40 Georgia 0.468
Ensuring Opportunity for AllEnsuring Opportunity for All
What are the policy and program solutions?Place:•Urban agenda to attract jobs, reform schools and taxes, and improve safety•Build affordable housing in suburbs and market-rate housing in cities
Ensuring Opportunity for AllEnsuring Opportunity for All
Education:•Quality, accessible early education•K-12 reform: funding, integration, leadership, teaching; grade-level reading and HS graduation•Accessible, affordable post-secondary education
Ensuring Opportunity for AllEnsuring Opportunity for All
Jobs, Income, and Wealth:•Make work pay with minimum wage, EITC; build job base and skills training•Facilitate access to SNAP, health and other benefits•Provide financial education and coaching
Opportunity in ActionOpportunity in Action
• Opportunities Hartford seeks “collective impact” to close opportunity gap; focus on jobs, education, income
• “Integrated service delivery” at DSS and nonprofits: jobs, benefits, financial education
• Result-Based Accountability: OUTCOMES
ConclusionsConclusions
• Connecticut is small in scale, wealthy• State on right policy track on education,
health; work to do on jobs and place• All of us need to be engaged to create
opportunity and better outcomes for all