When: Wednesday, June 9, 2021, 2:00 - 3:30 p.m. EDT
Online only: https://www.brookings.edu/events/time-to-update-how-we-measure-poverty-evaluating-alternatives-measures-of-poverty/
What: The official poverty rate is one of the most closely tracked government statistics used to evaluate progress in improving the circumstances of disadvantaged Americans. However, the measure suffers from widely recognized flaws, and more than 25 years have passed since the last major effort to recommend improvements. A two-year federal government effort to advance the next generation of poverty measurement recently concluded and published its final consensus report in January 2021. The final report recommends that the federal government produce an income poverty measure blending administrative and survey data and a consumption poverty measure. These new poverty measures would not replace existing poverty measures, including the Official Poverty Measure and the Supplemental Poverty Measure, but would be in addition to them. The report recommends that the Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics begin work to develop and produce these poverty measures immediately.
On June 9, in an event co-hosted by the Brookings Institution's Future of the Middle Class Initiative and the American Enterprise Institute, leading experts on poverty measurement will discuss the report and its recommendations. Bruce Meyer, University of Chicago professor and co-chair of the technical working group, will present the report’s findings and recommendations. Three discussants provide overall remarks on the report, and a roundtable of leading poverty experts will then discuss various elements of the report and specific recommendations.
Viewers can submit questions for speakers by emailing events@brookings.edu or via Twitter using #PovertyMeasures.