International Differences in Poverty Rates

The Country Comparisons data comes from Table 1 of a study done for the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) called the Luxembourg Study. The study was done by Professor Timothy Smeeding of Syracuse University in 2000 to compare poverty rates among older persons.  The LIS team compiled micro-data from different surveys in order to facilitate international comparative research.  The OECD is an organization consisting of developed countries that researches and coordinates economic, environmental and social policies. Read the full study.

Table 1. International Differences in Poverty Rates Among Older Persons

Country

Year

40% of Median Income

50% of Median Income

Australia

2003

  5.8

22.3

Austria

2000

  5.8

13.7

Belgium

2000

  5.7

16.4

Canada

2000

  1.5

  5.9

France

2000

  3.0

  8.5

Germany

2000

  3.9

10.1

Italy

2000

  5.6

13.7

Netherlands

1999

  1.4

  2.4

Spain

2000

10.2

23.4

Sweden

2000

  2.1

  7.7

United Kingdom

1999

  6.8

17.3

United States

2000

15.0

24.7

Source; Luxembourg Income Study (LIS) data

Table 1 provides cross-national data on poverty rates among older persons. That data provide poverty rates for households having a person over the age of 64. These poverty rates are measured relative to the median income in the country—either 40 percent or 50 percent of the median income. Thus they measure poverty relative to the standard of living in the country rather than measuring it against an absolute benchmark.

The average poverty rate for the eleven countries excluding the United States using the lower measure of 40 percent of median income is 4.7 percent. By comparison, the poverty rate in the United States by this measure is 15.0 percent, which is 10 percentage points higher, or three times as high. Making the same comparison for the higher benchmark of 50 percent of median income, the average for the eleven countries excluding the United States is 11.9 percent, compared to 24.7 percent for the United States.

Comparing with Canada, which is similar to the United States in some respects, 15 percent of the U.S. elderly population lives in a household with 40 percent or less of the median income, compared to 1.5 percent in Canada

*Poverty rate information is not included for Japan since that data is not part of the LIS data set.