The poverty rate would have dropped to zero without rising inequality: Supplemental poverty rate, actual and simulated, 1967–2017

Year Simulated Actual
1967 23.3% 25.0%
1968 22.4% 23.2%
1969 21.9% 21.8%
1970 22.1% 21.6%
1971 21.6% 21.5%
1972 20.6% 19.9%
1973 19.4% 18.6%
1974 19.8% 19.6%
1975 20.1% 18.9%
1976 19.0% 18.2%
1977 18.0% 18.2%
1978 16.8% 17.4%
1979 16.2% 17.2%
1980 16.6% 18.7%
1981 16.1% 19.9%
1982 17.0% 21.0%
1983 15.9% 21.5%
1984 14.0% 20.4%
1985 12.9% 20.1%
1986 12.1% 19.4%
1987 11.2% 18.2%
1988 10.1% 18.2%
1989 9.1% 17.8%
1990 8.8% 18.4%
1991 9.4% 18.7%
1992 8.6% 19.1%
1993 8.0% 20.2%
1994 7.0% 18.7%
1995 6.4% 17.2%
1996 5.4% 17.1%
1997 4.1% 16.4%
1998 2.7% 15.3%
1999 1.1% 14.6%
2000 -0.2% 14.1%
2001 14.6%
2002 14.6%
2003 14.8%
2004 14.6%
2005 14.6%
2006 14.6%
2007 14.8%
2008 14.6%
2009 14.6%
2010 15.3%
2011 15.4%
2012 16.0%
2013 16.1%
2014 15.9%
2015 14.8%
2016 14.2%
2017 13.9%

Notes: Simulated supplemental poverty rate is based on a model of the statistical relationship between growth in per capita GDP and poverty that prevailed between 1967 and 1979. In the model, the Supplemental Poverty Measure is anchored to 2012 poverty thresholds, allowing for changes in poverty trends to be explained by changes in income and net transfer payments. See Fox et al. 2014 in the source line for technical detail.

Source: Analysis by Elise Gould and Daniel Perez of the Economic Policy Institute of Liana Fox et al., “Waging War on Poverty: Historical Trends in Poverty Using the Supplemental Poverty Measure,” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper no. 19789, January 2014, https://doi.org/10.3386/w19789; Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) National Income Product Accounts (NIPA) [Table 7.1]; and Columbia Population Research Center, Historical Supplemental Poverty Measure Data [Table]. Analysis using methodology from Danziger and Gottschalk, America Unequal (Harvard Univ. Press, 1995).

View the underlying data on epi.org.