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Profiles and Projections Latino Children Today and Tomorrow Linda A. Jacobsen Population Reference Bureau NCLR Symposium October 22, 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "Profiles and Projections Latino Children Today and Tomorrow Linda A. Jacobsen Population Reference Bureau NCLR Symposium October 22, 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 Profiles and Projections Latino Children Today and Tomorrow Linda A. Jacobsen Population Reference Bureau NCLR Symposium October 22, 2009

2 The Number and Share of All Children Who Are Latino Is Growing Rapidly Source: U.S. Census Bureau and National Center for Health Statistics

3 Components of Population Change: 2007-2008 Source: U.S. Census Bureau.

4 Latino Women Average about Three Children Source: National Center for Health Statistics

5 Distribution of Children by Race and Ethnicity: 1990, 2008, and 2030 * Non-Hispanic. Estimates for 2008 and 2030 for Whites, Blacks and Others are for those who identify with only one race. Source: U.S. Census Bureau and National Center for Health Statistics

6 Source: PRB analysis of data from U.S. Census Bureau, 1990 Decennial Census. In 1990, Latino Children Were Primarily Concentrated in the Southwest and Florida

7 Source: PRB analysis of data from U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics; “Bridged-Race Vintage 2008 Postcensal Estimates,” prepared in collaboration with U.S. Census Bureau. Today, Latinos Make Up an Increasing Share of Children in the Midwest and Southeast

8 Latino Youth Have Significant Potential to Contribute to their Communities and the U.S.  34 percent of Latinos are under age 18  Most children are born in the U.S. and most are U.S. citizens (9 in 10)  Strong families: almost two-thirds (66%) live with two parents

9 Latino Children and Youth Also Face Some Significant Challenges  Economic Security  Education  Health  Language Barriers

10 Economic Security  More than one-fourth live in poverty  Three-fifths (60%) live in low-income families (below 200% of poverty)

11 Education  More than one-fourth of Latino 4 year-olds are not enrolled in early childhood education programs  Only 55 percent of ninth graders graduate from high school on time

12 Health  One in five (19%) do not have health insurance  Among children ages 10 to 17, about 4 in every 10 (41%) are overweight or obese

13 Language Barriers  One-fourth live in linguistically isolated households  Almost one-fifth (18%) have difficulty speaking English

14 If These Challenges are not Addressed, What Are the Implications? Two Possible Scenarios:  Current risk factors (rates) remain unchanged from now until 2030  Current risk factors (rates) change between now and 2030

15 Latino Children Will Make Up a Larger Share of All Children in High Risk Groups Scenario One: Same Rates In 2030 Share TodayShare in 2030 In poverty 32% 44% Low-income families 31% 44% Linguistically isolated 65% 74% Overweight or obese 22% 37% No health insurance 42% 56%

16 Source: PRB analysis of data from U.S. Census Bureau. Latino Child Poverty Declined in the 1990s, But Has Risen Again in Recent Years

17 Scenario Two: Potential Changes  Child Poverty Rate  What if it rose to 1990 level of 38 percent?  Share of Children Overweight/Obese  What if it increases by an additional 3 percentage points to 44 percent?  Share of Children without Health Insurance  What if it decreases by an additional 2 percentage points to 17 percent?

18 How Many Latino Children Could be Affected? Today* 2030* In poverty 4.1 10.2 Overweight or obese 2.2 5.2 No health insurance 2.7 4.6 *In millions

19 Stay Tuned in 2010! NCLR State-Level Report Regional Variations in Well-Being and Key Trends Since 2000


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