Data Report 3

High Country Income

This is the third in a continuing series of articles meant to provide demographic data and statistics to local officials and local interests to assist in their decision-making efforts.

Income Data for the High Country

Back to the Census
The prior reports noted that the Census is an instrument used to take a snapshot of the US population every ten years. Everyone is asked the same basic questions (age, sex, race, household relationship, and whether the home is owned or rented) with a statistically representative sample of the population getting a 'Long Form' which seeks responses to an additional set of social, economic, educational, housing, and employment topics.

The universe of common questions is released in Summary File 1 (SF1) and has results published down to the census block (the smallest geographic entity reported) level. The survey tabulations are made available primarily as Summary File 3 and 4 (SF3 and SF4) broken into tables on population and housing. Each topic group is divided into a series of components, part of which are released to the census tract level (a relatively permanent county subdivision with 1,000 to 8,000 inhabitants quite often following political boundaries or visible features) and others to the block group level (division of a census tract with 300 to 3,000 inhabitants and the smallest geographical unit for sample data).

How Information Is Gathered
The Census tabulates income primarily on three levels of human interaction: household (all people who occupy a housing unit--related or not or living alone--that is not considered group quarters, such as a dorm, prison, hospital, or nursing home); family (two or more related persons residing together); and individual (on a per capita basis). The Census gathers data on income for the most recent, completed year, so the figures presented in this report are actually for 1989 and 1999 earnings.

Where We Stand
Nearly 60% of Regional households earned less than $25,000, according to the 1990 Census, while that figure dropped to about 40% ten years later. During that same span, households with incomes of $50,000 or greater grew by 16%. In the 2000 Census, the State had 10% fewer households earning less than $25,000 and 10% more earning over $50,000 compared to the High Country. Median and average household incomes increased proportionately for the period both at the Regional and State levels, but the High Country remained at about 80% of the State figures for these measurements.

The Sources of Our Income
High Country households combined to produce a $3.2 trillion economic engine according to the 2000 Census, or about 2% of the North Carolina total while comprising 2.4% of the population. Between the 1990 and 2000 enumerations, the percentage of overall income in the Region attributable to wages/salaries declined by 4.5% while the amount coming from social security and retirement rose by about 3%. The High Country generates roughly 3% more income from self-employment ventures than the State average.

We Are Family
The distribution of family incomes is categorically higher than those for households in both Censuses for the Region and the State. The proportion of High Country families earning less than $25,000 declined from one of every two families in 1990 to one in every four in 2000 with a corresponding 20+% increase in the number of families with at least $50,000 income. The typical High Country family went from earning three-quarters of what the average North Carolina family earned in the 1990 Census to just over 82% of that figure for 2000.

Individually
Per capita income reported by the Census took the total earnings of all persons 15 or more years of age and divided it by the entire population. The Region's individuals noted a two-thirds increase in per capita income between the last two Censuses and a rise of from 80% to 83% of the same measure for the State. The average working man in the Region earned 76% of his counterpart Statewide. The average working woman did better proportionately (82%), but still typically made only two-thirds the salary of a man.

Cost of Living
The NC Justice and Community Development Center (www.ncjustice.org) has developed a measure of the cost to maintain an austere life style allowing for certain basic needs (food, housing, health care) and realities (transportation, taxes) in both an urban and a rural environment. This index is adjusted for family composition and then relates the total income that would be required to attain this threshold to an hourly wage and the recognized poverty guideline for the same number of people. According to their findings, an adult with an infant or two adults with an infant and preschooler in the High Country would need to earn $500 more per year than the same average rural family unit in the State, as a whole, to live at the same basic level.

From a Decision Maker's Perspective
Whether looking at income from a household, family, or individual perspective, High Country residents earn less than their State-wide counterparts as reflected in the latest Census. The Region accounts for a smaller proportion of the State's income than it does of the State's population. Income in the area arising from wages or salaries has declined as a percentage of aggregate household earnings over the last ten years and is 7% less than the State norm. At least one gauge sees it as more expensive to live in the Region than in the average rural part of the State.

For decision makers, a key to sustaining communities is attracting and retaining young adults (the report on population projections indicated the State is anticipating a 50% increase in 18 to 34 year olds, but only a 5% rise for the Region over the next 30 years) One way of doing this will be to encourage development of a growing number of jobs that pay a livable wage. To recruit and develop employment opportunities, decision makers will need to work toward providing a base of trained labor, a physical infrastructure capable of facilitating the movement of goods, services, and ideas, and services (water, power, and communications) to sustain these endeavors.

For further information:
The Bureau of the Census has income-related information on its website at www.census.gov . Select the AMERICAN FACTFINDER link on the left-hand side of the opening page, then DATASETS (again on the left), click on the circle to the left of Census 2000 Summary File 3 (SF3). Of the choices then offered, QUICK TABLES provides a profile of employment, income and poverty indicators for the chosen level of geography. DETAILED TABLES allows the user to choose from up to 230 population variables and 160 housing options, again depending upon the level of geography selected.

High Country Council of Governments maintains information from this and other sources for each of its member governments on its website. Click on the Demographics and Statistics' link at www.regiond.org or the selected county from the opening map and then the 'Statistics, Population, Housing, Social Characteristics' link for the desired county or town.

The NC Justice and Community Development Center works to reduce poverty in North Carolina by aiding individuals and communities to acquire the resources and services necessary to advance toward economic security. Their county-by-county index can be accessed from http://www.ncjustice.org/LivingWage/County%20LISmaster.htm.

*A Statistical Aside
The median of a group is found by arranging all constituents in order from lowest to highest and determining the exact middle occurrence so that half the instances are on either side of it. Medians for the High Country have been estimated using the following procedure in lieu of having actual distributions to assess: 1) add data for the seven counties to determine the grand total and its component midpoint, sum occurrences for the selected income intervals; 2) add the interval totals to determine which grouping is closest to, but does not exceed the median; 3) determine the percentage of the next interval that it would take to reach the midpoint and add that percentage of the dollars in that interval to the previously calculated total, albeit this assumes an ideal distribution for this interval, so the result is actually only an approximation.

Data

purpose | membership | staff | board | calendar | annual report
program divisions | local govt | state reps | links | demographics&statistics


Purpose of High Country High Country membership High Country Staff High Country Board of Directors Calendar Annual Report