Community Corner
Is It Good To Be Poor In West Chester?
A new study ranks Chester County higher than 74 percent of counties nationwide for income mobility amongst lower-earning families.

A new study ranks Chester County higher than 74 percent of counties nationwide for income mobility amongst lower-earning families.
Poor children growing up in Chester County wound up making about $2,240 more - about 9 percent more -annually than a poor child growing up in an average county, according to the study.
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Girls fared particularly well in the analysis, doing better in Chester County than in 78% of other counties around the country, and making $2,480 more annually than a child growing up in a poor county.
The Equality of Opportunity study was run by Raj Chetty and Nathaniel Hendren, and was a joint effort between Harvard University and the National Bureau of Economic Research.
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The study aimed to uncover the effects of specific neighborhoods on future income mobility.
The Chester County statistics differed drastically from some other nearby communities.
“Where children grow up affects their outcomes in adulthood in proportion to the time they spend in the place,” Hendren and Chetty wrote in the study. “Neighborhood environments have important effects well after early childhood.”
Chester ranked ahead of all counties in the Philadelphia area except for Bucks.
All of South Jersey, along with Delaware County and Philadelphia County, were either just barely above, or well below, the national average.
Researchers found five key factors in common in counties with strong upward mobility:
- Less concentrated poverty
- Less income inequality
- Better schools
- Larger share of two-parent families
- Lower crime rates.
Chester County children from average income families did better than 80 percent of the nation, while rich kids did better than 82 percent.
Children from families in the upper one percent of income earners, meanwhile, also fared better than 82 percent.
For more information on the study and other counties in Pennsylvania, click here.
Photo courtesy of the Equality of Opportunity Study.
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