Department of Employment Affairs and Social Protection information is available in the Annual Report 2018 and Statistical Information Report. In 2018, the consistent poverty rate was 7.7% for people under the age of 18, over four times higher than the rate of 1.7% for people aged 65 and over. The date shall be announced at a later stage. The at risk of poverty rate for individuals in households with one adult and one or more children aged under 18 was 29.7%, compared with 6.1% for persons in households composed of two adults, where at least one is aged 65 or over and there are no children under 18. The deprivation rate is heavily influenced by the number of people at work in a household. In 2018, the deprivation rate in a household with no people at work was 28.9%, over 10% higher than the rate of 18.5% where one person was at work. The deprivation rate for those at risk of poverty was 42.7% in 2019 compared with a high of 55.3% in 2013. In 2020 these results were published in a separate earlier release. A state pension was received by over one in eleven people in Ireland in 2019. The male and female consistent poverty rates were 5.4% and 5.6% respectively. A change to the NUTS3 regional classifications is outlined in the Background Notes. Poverty rate in Arkansas 2000-2019; Tennessee - poverty rate from 2000 to 2019; Mexico: people living in poverty 2014-2018, by severity; Mexico: population living in extreme poverty 2018, by state Estimating Artificial Light in Ireland from Satellite Imagery, 2015-2019, Agriculture Price Indices - Preliminary estimates, Ireland's UN SDGs 2019 - Report on Indicators for Goal 1 No Poverty, SDG 1.1.1 Population Below International Poverty Line, SDG 1.2.1 Population Below National Poverty Line, SDG 1.2.2 Population in Poverty in all its Dimensions, SDG 1.3.1 Population Covered by Social Protection, SDG 1.1.1: Proportion of the Population Below the International Poverty Line, Table 1.1 SDG 1.1.1 Consistent Poverty Rate by Gender, Age Group and Region (XLS 11KB), Table 1.2 SDG 1.1.1 Consistent Poverty Rate by Number of Persons at Work in Household (XLS 11KB), Table 1.3 SDG 1.1.1 Consistent Poverty Rate by Region (XLS 11KB), SDG 1.2.1: Proportion of the Population Living below the National Poverty Line, Table 1.4 SDG 1.2.1 At Risk of Poverty Rate by Gender, Age Group and Region (XLS 11KB), Table 1.5 SDG 1.2.1 At Risk of Poverty Rate by Number of Persons at Work in the Household (XLS 11KB), Table 1.6 SDG 1.2.1 At Risk of Poverty Rate by Region (XLS 11KB), SDG 1.2.2: Proportion of the Population Living in Poverty in all its Dimensions, Table 1.7 SDG 1.2.2 Deprivation Rate by Gender, Age Group and Region (XLS 11KB), Table 1.8 SDG 1.2.2 Deprivation Rate by Number of Persons at Work in the Household (XLS 11KB), Table 1.9 Deprivation Rate by Region (XLS 11KB), SDG 1.3.1: Proportion of Population Covered by Social Protection Systems, Table 1.10 SDG 1.3.1 Proportion of the Population Receiving Social Welfare Payments by Year (XLS 10KB), Table 1.11 - SDG 1.3.1 Proportion of the Population Receiving Social Welfare Payments by Scheme (XLS 11KB), Table 1.12 - SDG 1.3.1 Proportion of the Population Receiving State Pension (Contributory) in 2019 (XLS 11KB), Table 1.1 - SDG 1.1.1 Consistent Poverty Rate by Gender, Age Group and Region, Table 1.2 - SDG 1.1.1 Consistent Poverty Rate by Number of Persons at Work in the Household, Number of Persons at Work in the Household, Table 1.3 - SDG 1.1.1 Consistent Poverty Rate by Region, *A change to the NUTS3 regional classifications is outlined in the Background Notes, Table 1.4 - SDG 1.2.1 At Risk of Poverty Rate by Gender, Age Group and Region, Table 1.5 - SDG 1.2.1 At Risk of Poverty Rate by Number of Persons at Work in the Household, Table 1.6 - SDG 1.2.1 At Risk of Poverty Rate by Region, Table 1.7 - SDG 1.2.2 Deprivation Rate by Gender, Age Group and Region, Table 1.8 - SDG 1.2.2 Deprivation Rate by Number of Persons at Work in the Household, Table 1.9 SDG 1.2.2 Deprivation Rate by Region, Table 1.10 - SDG 1.3.1 Proportion of the Population Receiving Social Welfare Payments by Year, Source: Department of Employment Affairs and Social Protection, Table 1.11 - SDG 1.3.1 Population in Receipt of Social Welfare Payments by Scheme, 2018, Widow/er's or Surviving Civil Partner's Contributory Pension, Table 1.12 - SDG 1.3.1 Proportion of the Population Receiving State Pension (Contributory) in 2019, *CSO County Population Estimates Census 2016. Child poverty statistics: Year ended June 2019 | Stats NZ. See Table 1.8. The rate then fell over the following four years to stand at 14% in 2018. In 2019, 12.8 per cent of workers between the ages of 15 and 24 lived in poverty, compared with 6.3 per cent of workers over the age of 24, with the difference between youth and adult working poverty rates decreasing only marginally since 2000. The deprivation rate for those not at risk of poverty was 14.2% in 2019, compared with a high of 25.8% in 2013. The consistent poverty rate in urban areas was 5.5% in 2018, slightly below the rate of 5.8% in rural areas. See Table 1.4. These tables present data on income, earnings, income inequality & poverty in the United States based on information collected in the 2019 and earlier CPS ASEC. Child poverty statistics 2. See table 3.3. In 2019, the ‘at risk of poverty’ rate was 12.8% compared with 14.0% in 2018. Office Hours: 8:15 - 16:15. Further analysis of consistent poverty rates by household composition shows that individuals living in households where there was one adult and one or more children aged under 18 had the highest consistent poverty rate at 17.1%. We use some essential cookies to make this website work. Skehard Road, Cork T12 X00E, Ireland, Geographical Profiles of Income in Ireland, Life in 1916 Ireland: Stories from statistics, Ireland North and South - A Statistical Profile, How Dark is your Sky? In 2019, 17.8% of the population were defined as living in enforced deprivation, i.e. Absolute poverty has risen by 200,000 to 3.7 million children Relative Child Poverty remained broadly stable at 4.1 million 70% of these children now come from working families – up from 67% last year Skip to content. In 2019, if all social transfers and pension income were excluded from income, the ‘at risk of poverty’ rate would have been 41.4%, little changed from the 2018 rate of 40.9%. See Table 1.9 and Map 1.3. Quarterly Statistics Bulletin , 2019-2020(Q3) An analysis by socio-demographic characteristics showed that those most at risk of poverty in 2019 were those individuals who were not at work due to illness or disability (37.5%) and individuals who were unemployed (35.4%). This page contains statistics and analysis related to poverty, income inequality and household income overall. An analysis of consistent poverty rates by principal economic status shows that the consistent poverty rate was highest among unemployed individuals (20.2%) and lowest among those who were at work (1.3%) and those who were retired (2.1%). The consistent poverty rate in 2019 was 5.5% compared with 5.6% in 2018, this is not a statistically significant change. This statistic shows the poverty rate in Georgia from 2000 to 2019. Central Statistics Office Deprivation rates were lower among older people. The deflator is derived from the monthly CPI and takes into account the rolling nature of the income data collected by SILC. Related statistics can be found here: 1. The highest deprivation rate in 2018 was the Midlands region at 20.3%, while the lowest was in the Mid-West at 12.8%. SILC 2017 Statistics Poland. The non-contributory state pension was received by 2% of people while over four times as many people received the contributory state pension, at 9.1% of the population in 2019.