| Overview | Work Attachment and Advancement |
State policies that promote the economic security of our nation’s families can help offset larger economic and social conditions that make it difficult for families to get by and get ahead. This four-part profile provides data on South Carolina’s low-income children and families and highlights state policy choices regarding families’ work attachment and advancement, income adequacy, and asset development.
In South Carolina, there are 591,014 families, with 1,049,241 children. Among these children, 44 percent live in families that are low-income, defined as income below twice the federal poverty level (nationally, 41 percent of children live in low-income families). Young children are particularly likely to live in low-income families.
Low wages and a lack of higher education contribute to families having insufficient incomes. Nationally, 51 percent of low-income children have at least one parent who works full-time, year-round; in South Carolina, the figure is 54 percent.
Parents without a college education often struggle to earn enough to support a family, but only 23 percent of adults in South Carolina have a bachelor’s degree. A substantial portion of children in South Carolina whose parents only have a high school diploma60 percentare low income.
Children of foreign-born parents are also more likely to be low income than children of native-born parents.
Children in South Carolina by income level, 20081
Employment status of parents of low-income children, 20081
Percent of children who are low-income by parental education, 20081
Percent of children who are low-income by parents' nativity, 20081
Learn more about South Carolina’s children.
| Work Attachment and Advancement |
Data Notes and Sources
Data were compiled from 50-state sources. Some state policy decisions may have changed since these data were collected.
- State data were calculated from the Annual Social and Economic Supplement (the March supplement) of the Current Population Survey from 2007, 2008, and 2009, representing information from calendar years 2006, 2007, and 2008. NCCP averaged three years of data because of small sample sizes in less populated states. The national data were calculated from the 2009 data, representing information from the previous calendar year.