No. 764. Families Below Poverty Level—Selected Characteristics, By Race And Spanish Origin: 1983 [In thousands, except percent Families as of March 1984. For explanation of poverty, see text p. 429] X Not applicable. 'Includes races not shown separately. 2 Persons of Spanish origin may be of any No. 765. Work Experience Of Family Householders Below The Poverty Level, By Sex And Race: 1975 And 1982 [In thousands, except percent Families as of March of the following year. For 1975. includes householders 14 years and over, for 1962, householders 15 years and over. For explanation of poverty level see text p. 429] 1 Includes races not shown separately. a Includes householders In Armed Forces not shown separately * Includes "other" not shown separately. Source: US Bureau of the Census. Current Population Reports, series P-60, Nos. 106 and 144. No. 766. Families And Unrelated Individuals, By Type Of Income And Poverty Status: 1982 [Families and unrelated individuals, as ol March 1983. Hhldr. = householder. For explanation ol poverty level, see text. p. 429. For limitations of data, see source] 1 Includes races not shown separately. 2 Includes families and unrelated individuals with no income, not shown separately. 'Some families and unrelated Individuals may have more than one type of income. * Includes wages, salaries, and self-employment income. * Includes railroad retirement income. ° Includes unemployment and workers' compensation, and veterans' payments. 7 Includes income from private and government employee pensions, annuities, dividends, interest, rent, estates, trusts, alimony, child support, regular contributions from outside the household, etc. Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census. Current Population Reports, series P-60, No. 144. and unpublished data. No. 767. Persons Below Poverty Level And Poverty Rate, By Valuation Technique And Type Of Noncash Benefit Included: 1979 To 1983 [Persons as of March of the following year. Valuation techniques that are used to measure noncash benefits are as follows: (1) Market value approach which is equal to the purchase price in the private market of the goods received by the recipient; (2) recipient and/or cash equivalent approach which is the amount of cash that would make the recipient just as well off as the inkind transfer or would reflect the recipient's own valuation of the benefit and (3) poverty budget share value which limits the value of food, housing, or medical transfers to the proportions spent on these items by persons at or near the poverty line in 1960-61 (when in-kind benefits were minimal). For more information on the methodology, see source] 20.478 18.221 23.895 21,046 26.784 23.563 29,407 24.334 32.528 30,585 106 11 8 11.7 103 100 128 127 105 102 132 130 Including food, housing, and all medical care Poverty budget share value approach: Including food and housing Including food, housing, and medical care for noninstitutionalized persons Including food, housing, and all medical care... 20.186 23.299 26,175 28.720 29.935 9 1 104 11 5 125 129 129 'See text. p. 429. Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census. Estimates of Poverty Including the Value of Noncash Benefits: 1983, Technical Paper 52 No. 768. PERSONS BELOW POVERTY LEVEL AND POVERTY RATE, BY SELECTED CHARACTERISTIC, USING ALTERNATIVE METHODS OF VALUING NONCASH BENEFITS: 1983 (Persons as of March 1984. For explanation of valuation techniques, see headnote, table 767. For composition of regions, see figure I, inside front cover) White PERCENT BELOW All persons. Persons of Spanish origin may be of any race. No. 769. APPALACHIA-PER CAPITA MONEY INCOME, 1969 AND 1979, PERSONS BELOW POVERTY LEVEL, 1969 AND 1979, AND PER CAPITA PERSONAL INCOME, 1981 (“Appalachia" refers to a region delineated in the Appalachian Regional Development Act of 1965, as amended, containing 397 counties in 13 States. For definition of poverty level, see text, p. 429) Data compiled from county data, U.S. Bureau of the Census. ? Entire State lies within the Appalachian region. Source: Appalachian Regional Commission, Appalachia-A Reference Book, Supplement to Second Edition, 1981, and unpublished data. No. 770. Net Stock Of Fixed Reproducible Tangible Wealth In Current And Constant (1972) Dollars: 1929 To 1983 [In billions of dollars, except percent. As of Dec. 31. See headnotes, table 892] Z Less than $500 million. 'Consumer durables. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Fixed Reproducible Tangible Wealth in the United States, 1925-79, Survey of Current Business. August 1983. and unpublished data. No. 771. Personal Wealth—Top Wealthholders, By Characteristics And By Size Of Gross Estate, And Type Of Asset: 1953 To 1976 [Estimates based on Federal estate tax returns showing gross assels ot $60,000 or more (greater than $120,000 in 1976) tiled with Internal Revenue Service. Comparability of data is affected by revisions in estimating techniques] X Not applicable- NA Not available Z Less than .05 percent. 'includes persons of unknown ago * $120,001-$199.999 in 1976 * Includes checking and savings accounts, savings certificates, etc. Source U.S. Internal Revenue Service. Statistics ot Income, 1962 a?d 19?2. Supplemental Report. Personal Wealth and Statistics of Income Bulletin. Summer 1963. No. 772. PERSONAL WEALTH-NUMBER OF TOP WEALTHHOLDERS, BY SEX, MARTIAL STATUS, AND AGE, AND BY SIZE OF NET WORTH: 1976 (In thousands. See headnote, table 771] 1 Includes divorced persons. Includes persons of unknown age. Includes returns with negative net worth. Source: U.S. Internal Revenue Service, Statistics of Income Bulletin, Summer 1983. No. 773. PERSONAL WEALTH-NUMBER AND ASSETS OF TOP WEALTHHOLDERS, BY STATE OR OTHER AREA: 1976 [See headnote, table 771. Totals derived from adding State data differ slightly from national totals shown here because of the sample weighting procedures used. For composition of regions, see fig. I, inside front cover) |