Census figures show drop in Detroit poverty rate
DETROIT — Fewer people are living in poverty in Detroit, although the former car and manufacturing giant still has the highest rate among the nation’s 20 largest cities, according to updated census estimates.
Detroit’s 2016 poverty rate of 35.7 per cent was down from nearly 40 per cent the year before, the U.S. Census Bureau said Thursday. Residents also are making more money. Census estimates show Detroit’s 2016 median household income of just over $28,000 topped the nearly $26,000 in 2015.
Those figures are good news for Motown, which continues to rebound from the Great Recession and the city’s 2014 exit from the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.
A number of tech-based companies have moved operations and employees into Detroit’s resurgent downtown over the past few years. Hundreds of other jobs have been created by manufacturing firms taking root across the city’s 139 square miles (360 sq. kilometres).