For data on these topics, click on the link:

Return to the US map
Print Page Print | Email Page Email | Bookmark page Bookmark

MASSACHUSETTS
Income & Poverty

Other facts sheets for Massachusetts:

The data below describe the state rankings and selected characteristics of the immigrant and native-born populations in Massachusetts in 2011.

Rankings
The following shows Massachusetts' rankings in several categories. All rankings include the 50 states and the District of Columbia and are ranked highest to lowest.
  Rankings
Number of the foreign-born population living in poverty, 2011: 11 out of 51
Share of the foreign-born population living in poverty, 2011: 42 out of 51
Numeric change in the foreign-born population in poverty, 2000 to 2011: 20 out of 51
Percent change in the foreign-born population in poverty, 2000 to 2011: 42 out of 51

Data Highlights
For data on these topics, click on the link:

Who are the foreign born?
The term foreign born refers to people residing in the United States at the time of the census who were not US citizens at birth. The foreign-born population includes naturalized citizens, lawful permanent immigrants, refugees and asylees, legal nonimmigrants (including those on student, work, or other temporary visas), and persons residing in the country without authorization. By comparison, the term native refers to people residing in the United States who were US citizens in one of three categories: 1) people born in one of the 50 states or the District of Columbia; 2) people born in United States Insular Areas such as Puerto Rico or Guam; or 3) people who were born abroad to at least one US citizen parent.

We use the terms immigrants and foreign born interchangeably.

Earnings of Full-Time Workers
(This sheet describes earnings of civilian employed workers)

In Massachusetts in 2011, 21.2 percent of foreign-born workers earned less than $25,000 a year and 42.7 percent earned $50,000 or more.
In Massachusetts in 2011, 5.0 percent of full-time, year-round, immigrant workers (those working more than 50 weeks a year and more than 35 hours per week) earned less than $15,000 a year; 33.8 percent earned between $15,000 and $35,000; 18.5 percent earned between $35,000 and $50,000; and 42.7 percent earned $50,000 or more. In comparison, 2.8 percent of full-time, year-round, native-born workers earned less than $15,000 a year; 19.6 percent earned between $15,000 and $35,000; 20.1 percent earned between $35,000 and $50,000; and 57.4 percent earned $50,000 or more.

At the national level, 9.8 percent of full-time, year-round, foreign-born workers earned less than $15,000 a year; 40.9 percent earned between $15,000 and $35,000; 16.6 percent earned between $35,000 and $50,000; and 32.6 percent earned $50,000 or more.

Median Earnings by Nativity and Gender

Male immigrant workers had average annual earnings of $46,492 compared to $38,339 for female immigrant workers.
Among full-time, year-round, foreign-born workers in Massachusetts in 2011, median earnings over the previous 12 months were $38,339 for women and $46,492 for men. The median earnings of noncitizen women were $33,040 and those of noncitizen men were $40,661. In comparison, naturalized-citizen women had median earnings of $40,739 and naturalized-citizen men $53,291. Among full-time, year-round, native-born workers, median earnings during the comparable period were $47,573 for women and $61,882 for men.

At the national level, median earnings of full-time, year-round, foreign-born workers were $31,749 for women and $35,918 for men. The median earnings for noncitizen workers were $24,347 for women and $28,507 for men. Among naturalized-citizen workers, women had median earnings of $38,419 and men of $47,547. Among native-born workers, median earnings during the comparable period were $38,044 for women and $50,056 for men.

What Was the Poverty Threshold in 2011?
Whether any family is considered below the poverty threshold depends on the family's total income before taxes, not including any capital gains or noncash benefits, such as food stamps or housing subsidies.

The Census Bureau's poverty threshold varies depending on the number of adults and children in a family. The threshold is adjusted each month to account for inflation. Because respondents filled out the American Community Survey in different months, the poverty threshold that is applied to each family depends on the month in which the survey was taken.

To give a general idea of poverty levels, as defined by the Office of Management and Budget, the average poverty threshold for a family of four in 2011 was $23,021; for a family of three, $17,916; for a family of two, $ 14,657; and for an unrelated individual, $11,484. All members of a family are assigned the same poverty status. Poverty thresholds are the same for the entire United States, despite differences in the cost of living across US communities.
Population in Poverty

The immigrant population in Massachusetts living below the federal poverty threshold changed by 34.7 percent between 2000 and 2011.
Between 2000 and 2011, the foreign-born population living in poverty went from 108,884 to 146,651, representing a change of 34.7 percent. In comparison, the foreign-born population living in poverty changed from 76,264 to 108,884 between 1990 and 2000, a difference of 42.8 percent.

At the national level, the immigrant population below the poverty threshold increased from 3,435,394 to 5,473,300 between 1990 and 2000, representing a change of 59.3 percent, and grew from 5,473,300 to 7,797,199 (42.5 percent) between 2000 and 2011.

In 2011, 15.3 percent of the foreign-born population lived below the poverty threshold.
In 2011, 15.3 percent of Massachusetts' immigrant population lived below the poverty threshold, compared with 14.4 percent in 2000 and 13.8 percent in 1990. Meanwhile, 10.9 percent of the native-born population in Massachusetts lived below the poverty threshold in 2011.

At the national level, 19.6 percent of the immigrants population lived below the poverty threshold in 2011, compared to 17.7 percent in 2000 and 17.9 percent in 1990. Nationally, 15.4 percent of the native-born population lived below the poverty threshold in 2011.

In Massachusetts, 19.1 percent of noncitizens lived in poverty in 2011, compared to 11.6 percent of naturalized citizens.

Of the foreign-born population in Massachusetts in 2011, 19.1 percent of noncitizens lived in poverty, compared to 11.6 percent of naturalized citizens.

Nationally, 26.3 percent of noncitizens lived in poverty in 2011, compared to 11.5 percent of naturalized citizens.

Families with Children in Poverty

In Massachusetts, 13.1 percent of all foreign-born families lived below the poverty threshold.
In 2011, 13.1 percent of all families headed by an immigrant had incomes below the poverty threshold. At the same time, 17.1 percent of foreign-born families with children under 18 lived below the poverty threshold. Foreign-born families consisting of a married couple and children under 18 were less likely to live below the poverty threshold than families consisting of a female and children under 18 with no husband present (9.2 versus 35.4 percent).

In comparison, 7.1 percent of all families headed by a native-born person had incomes below the poverty threshold, as did 12.0 percent of native families with children under 18. As with foreign-born families, native families consisting of a married couple with children under 18 were less likely to be living in poverty than families headed by a female and children under 18 with no husband present (2.8 versus 34.9 percent).

At the national level, 18.5 percent of families headed by a foreign-born person had incomes below the poverty threshold in 2011, while 24.6 percent of foreign-born families with children under 18 lived below the poverty threshold. Foreign-born families consisting of a married couple and children under 18 were less likely to live below the poverty threshold than foreign-born families consisting of a female and children under 18 (17.9 versus 45.2 percent).

Language Groupings

Indo-European languages include French, Italian, Portuguese, German, Yiddish, other West Germanic languages, Scandinavian languages, Greek, Russian, Polish, Serbo-Croatian, other Slavic languages, Armenian, Persian, Gujarathi, Hindi, and Urdu.

Asian and Pacific Island languages include Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Mon-Khmer/Cambodian, Miao/Hmong, Thai, Laotian, Vietnamese, and Tagalog.

Other languages include Navajo, other Native North American languages, Hungarian, Arabic, Hebrew, and African languages.

Population in Poverty by Language Spoken at Home

In Massachusetts, 28.5 percent of persons who spoke Spanish at home lived in poverty, compared to 17.7 percent of persons who spoke Asian or Pacific Island languages, and 12.4 percent of persons who spoke other Indo-European languages.
Of both native and foreign-born persons in Massachusetts in 2011, 8.9 percent of those who spoke only English lived in poverty, compared to 28.5 percent of those who spoke Spanish at home, 12.4 percent who spoke other Indo-European languages, 17.7 percent who spoke Asian and Pacific Island languages, and 17.2 percent who spoke other languages.

Nationally, 13.6 percent of those who spoke only English lived in poverty, compared to 25.4 percent of those who spoke Spanish at home, 13.7 percent who spoke other Indo-European languages, 14.2 percent who spoke Asian and Pacific Island languages, and 26.7 percent who spoke other languages.




Table 1. Population by Poverty Status in Massachusetts, 1990 to 2011
 

1990

2000

2011

  Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent
Household Population of Massachusetts for Whom Poverty Status Is Determined 5,801,791 100.0 6,159,080 100.0 6,367,148 100.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 505,430 8.7 581,467 9.4 738,514 11.6
100 to 149 percent of the poverty level 331,238 5.7 368,769 6.0 445,771 7.0
At or above 150 percent of the poverty level 4,965,123 85.6 5,208,844 84.6 5,182,863 81.4
Native Born 5,249,660 100.0 5,404,391 100.0 5,406,776 100.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 429,166 8.2 472,583 8.7 591,863 10.9
100 to 149 percent of the poverty level 279,846 5.3 302,252 5.6 349,689 6.5
At or above 150 percent of the poverty level 4,540,648 86.5 4,629,556 85.7 4,465,224 82.6
Foreign Born 552,131 100.0 754,689 100.0 960,372 100.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 76,264 13.8 108,884 14.4 146,651 15.3
100 to 149 percent of the poverty level 51,392 9.3 66,517 8.8 96,082 10.0
At or above 150 percent of the poverty level 424,475 76.9 579,288 76.8 717,639 74.7
 

Change 1990 to 2000

Change 1990 to 2011

Change 2000 to 2011

  Numeric Percent Numeric Percent Numeric Percent
Household Population of Massachusetts for Whom Poverty Status Is Determined 357,289 6.2 565,357 9.7 208,068 3.4
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 76,037 15.0 233,084 46.1 157,047 27.0
100 to 149 percent of the poverty level 37,531 11.3 114,533 34.6 77,002 20.9
At or above 150 percent of the poverty level 243,721 4.9 217,740 4.4 -25,981 -0.5
Native Born 154,731 2.9 157,116 3.0 2,385 0.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 43,417 10.1 162,697 37.9 119,280 25.2
100 to 149 percent of the poverty level 22,406 8.0 69,843 25.0 47,437 15.7
At or above 150 percent of the poverty level 88,908 2.0 -75,424 -1.7 -164,332 -3.5
Foreign Born 202,558 36.7 408,241 73.9 205,683 27.3
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 32,620 42.8 70,387 92.3 37,767 34.7
100 to 149 percent of the poverty level 15,125 29.4 44,690 87.0 29,565 44.4
At or above 150 percent of the poverty level 154,813 36.5 293,164 69.1 138,351 23.9
Notes: Poverty status is not determined for unrelated individuals under age 15 (such as foster children) or for persons lacking conventional housing. 2. Data for Alaska, Maine, Montana, South Dakota, Vermont, and West Virginia are from the US Census Bureau's pooled 2009-2011 ACS and for North Dakota and Wyoming are from 2007-2011 ACS. Data for the United States and the rest of the states are from 2011 ACS.
Sources: US Census Bureau, American Community Survey (ACS), various years (see Note 2 above); 2000 Decennial Census; Steven Ruggles, J. Trent Alexander, Katie Genadek, Ronald Goeken, Matthew B. Schroeder, and Matthew Sobek. Integrated Public Use Microdata Series: Version 5.0 [Machine-readable database]. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 2011.

For information about ACS methodology,sampling error, and nonsampling error, click here.

Table 2. Income and Poverty Characteristics of the Population in Massachusetts, 2011
POVERTY STATUS BY CITIZENSHIP
Household Population of Massachusetts for Whom Poverty Status Is Determined 6,367,148
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 11.6
100 to 199 percent of the poverty level 13.7
At or above 200 percent of the poverty level 74.7
Native Born 5,406,776
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 10.9
100 to 199 percent of the poverty level 12.8
At or above 200 percent of the poverty level 76.2
Foreign Born 960,372
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 15.3
100 to 199 percent of the poverty level 18.9
At or above 200 percent of the poverty level 65.9
Noncitizen 467,333
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 19.1
100 to 199 percent of the poverty level 21.6
At or above 200 percent of the poverty level 59.3
Naturalized Citizen 493,039
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 11.6
100 to 199 percent of the poverty level 16.3
At or above 200 percent of the poverty level 72.1
EARNINGS IN LAST 12 MONTHS OF FULL-TIME, YEAR-ROUND WORKERS
(IN 2011 INFLATION-ADJUSTED DOLLARS)
Full-Time, Year-Round Workers in Massachusetts Age 16 And Older with Earnings, 2011 2,178,423
Earned $1 to $9,999, or loss 1.4
Earned $10,000 to $14,999 1.9
Earned $15,000 to $24,999 9.1
Earned $25,000 to $34,999 13.2
Earned $35,000 to $49,999 19.8
Earned $50,000 to $74,999 24.4
Earned $75,000 or more 30.2
Native Born 1,771,311
Earned $1 to $9,999, or loss 1.2
Earned $10,000 to $14,999 1.6
Earned $15,000 to $24,999 7.4
Earned $25,000 to $34,999 12.2
Earned $35,000 to $49,999 20.1
Earned $50,000 to $74,999 25.9
Earned $75,000 or more 31.5
Foreign Born 407,112
Earned $1 to $9,999, or loss 1.9
Earned $10,000 to $14,999 3.1
Earned $15,000 to $24,999 16.2
Earned $25,000 to $34,999 17.6
Earned $35,000 to $49,999 18.5
Earned $50,000 to $74,999 18.3
Earned $75,000 or more 24.4
Noncitizen 185,901
Earned $1 to $9,999, or loss 2.5
Earned $10,000 to $14,999 4.3
Earned $15,000 to $24,999 20.3
Earned $25,000 to $34,999 19
Earned $35,000 to $49,999 16.5
Earned $50,000 to $74,999 16.3
Earned $75,000 or more 21
Naturalized Citizen 221,211
Earned $1 to $9,999, or loss 1.5
Earned $10,000 to $14,999 2.1
Earned $15,000 to $24,999 12.6
Earned $25,000 to $34,999 16.4
Earned $35,000 to $49,999 20.2
Earned $50,000 to $74,999 19.9
Earned $75,000 or more 27.2
MEDIAN EARNINGS IN LAST 12 MONTHS OF FULL-TIME, YEAR-ROUND WORKERS
(IN 2011 INFLATION-ADJUSTED DOLLARS)
Full-Time, Year-Round Workers in Massachusetts, 2011  
Male $60,264
Female $46,185
Native Born  
Male $61,882
Female $47,573
Foreign Born  
Male $46,492
Female $38,339
Noncitizen  
Male $40,661
Female $33,040
Naturalized Citizen  
Male $53,291
Female $40,739
SHARE OF FAMILIES IN POVERTY BY CITIZENSHIP AND FAMILY TYPE
All Families (Among Those for Whom Poverty Status Is Determined) 8.3
With related children under age 18 13.1
With related children under age 5 only 13.7
Married-couple families 3.3
With related children under age 18 4.3
With related children under age 5 only 4.4
Families with female householder, no husband present 25.6
With related children under age 18 35.0
With related children under age 5 only 38.4
Native-Born Families 7.1
With related children under age 18 12.0
With related children under age 5 only 13.3
Married-couple families 2.2
With related children under age 18 2.8
With related children under age 5 only 2.1
Families with female householder, no husband present 25.0
With related children under age 18 34.9
With related children under age 5 only 42.5
Foreign-Born Families 13.1
With related children under age 18 17.1
With related children under age 5 only 15.1
Married-couple families 8.1
With related children under age 18 9.2
With related children under age 5 only 11.2
Families with female householder, no husband present 27.3
With related children under age 18 35.4
With related children under age 5 only 23.7
Noncitizen 17.5
With related children under age 18 21.7
With related children under age 5 only 21.2
Married-couple families 10.6
With related children under age 18 12.3
With related children under age 5 only 16.8
Families with female householder, no husband present 34.2
With related children under age 18 40.7
With related children under age 5 only 28.3
Naturalized Citizen 10.2
With related children under age 18 13.3
With related children under age 5 only 6.8
Married-couple families 6.6
With related children under age 18 6.9
With related children under age 5 only 4.2
Families with female householder, no husband present 22.2
With related children under age 18 30.6
With related children under 5 age only 14.3
MEDIAN EARNINGS IN LAST 12 MONTHS BY PERIOD OF ENTRY
(IN 2011 INFLATION-ADJUSTED DOLLARS)
Full-Time, Year-Round, Foreign-Born Workers in Massachusetts, 2011  
Male $46,492
Female $38,339
Entered the United States in 2000 or Later  
Male $37,764
Female $32,503
Entered the United States between 1990 and 1999  
Male $50,905
Female $39,058
Entered the United States before 1990  
Male $52,187
Female $41,189
FOREIGN BORN IN POVERTY BY WORLD REGION OF BIRTH
Born in Africa N
Below 100 percent of the poverty level N
Born in Asia 278,522
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 17.1
Born in Europe 224,270
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 9.8
Born in Latin America (South America, Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean) 345,794
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 17.8
Born in Northern America (Canada, Bermuda, Greenland, and St. Pierre and Miquelon) N
Below 100 percent of the poverty level N
Born in Oceania N
Below 100 percent of the poverty level N
Note: 1. Poverty status is not determined for unrelated individuals under age 15 (such as foster children) or for persons lacking conventional housing.

2. Data for Alaska, Maine, Montana, South Dakota, Vermont, and West Virginia are from the US Census Bureau's pooled 2009-2011 ACS and for North Dakota and Wyoming are from 2007-2011 ACS. Data for the United States and the rest of the states are from 2011 ACS.

The letter N indicates that a number could not be provided by the Census Bureau because the number of sample cases was too small for this state.

Source: US Census Bureau, American Community Survey (ACS), different years.

For information about ACS methodology,sampling error, and nonsampling error, click here.

Table 3. Poverty Status of Residents in Massachusetts by Language Spoken at Home, 2011
 
Number
Percent
Household Population of Massachusetts for Whom Poverty Status Is Determined, Age 5 and Older 6,007,609 100.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 676,026 11.3
At or above 100 percent of the poverty level 5,331,583 88.7
Speaks Only English 4,679,195 100.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 418,254 8.9
At or above 100 percent of the poverty level 4,260,941 91.1
Speaks Spanish 482,994 100.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 137,414 28.5
At or above 100 percent of the poverty level 345,580 71.5
Speaks Other Indo-European Languages 545,060 100.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 67,439 12.4
At or above 100 percent of the poverty level 477,621 87.6
Speaks Asian or Pacific Island Languages 231,770 100.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 41,139 17.7
At or above 100 percent of the poverty level 190,631 82.3
Speaks Other Languages 68,590 100.0
Below 100 percent of the poverty level 11,780 17.2
At or above 100 percent of the poverty level 56,810 82.8
Note: Poverty status is not determined for unrelated individuals under the age of 15 (such as foster children) or for persons lacking conventional housing.

The letter N indicates that a number could not be provided by the Census Bureau because the number of sample cases was too small for this state.

Source: US Census Bureau, 2011 American Community Survey.
For information about ACS methodology,sampling error, and nonsampling error, click here.

For data on these topics, click on the link: