Graphic by Ben Hasson

Half of Texas households are one crisis away from poverty, according to a new report that ranks the state 37thย in residents’ overall financial security.

The report released Thursday by the Corporation for Enterprise Development, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit that seeks to create economic opportunity, defines โ€œliquid-asset poorโ€ as lacking enough savings to pay for three months of basic expenses in case of a crisis such as a job loss.

In Texas, 49.8 percent of households are liquid-asset poor, compared to 43.5 percent in the nation as a whole, the study says. Texas ranks 30th in the country for liquid-asset poverty.

โ€œDespite steady job growth and low unemployment rates, many Texas residents are still struggling with persistent financial insecurity and have difficulty moving up the economic ladder,โ€ said Tim Morstad, manager of advocacy and outreach for AARP Texas.

Many middle-class households are among those considered liquid-asset poor, according to the report, 2014 Assets & Opportunity Scorecard.ย A majority of Texans who live below the federal poverty line of $23,550 for a family of four are considered financially insecure, as are nearly a third of households earning between $54,049 and $90,468 a year.

The report also ranks Texas 42nd for its percentage of low-wage jobs: 27.8 percent.

Bill Peacock, vice president of research at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a conservative think tank, said that the report fails to take into account the fact that people who canโ€™t find jobs in other states are able to find jobs in Texas.

โ€œTexas gives people the chance to get out of poverty because they can work here,โ€ Peacock said. โ€œThe report misses a lot when it comes to the welfare of Texans.โ€

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Corrie MacLaggan worked at The Texas Tribune from 2013 to 2021, as a demographics reporter, news editor and then managing editor. Previously, the Austin native worked as a national correspondent for Reuters,...