Average
Income in the USA by Family and Household
 
 
 
 
I
have to make few comments about Ceylon.
We
do not have people starving (relatively in the South) or eating from
bins.
Our
food is cheap and there are plenty of alternatives and variations.
Our
immunization program is good enough but not up to the International
Standards.
Often
the imported items are substandard.
Dengue
is a ploy used by doctors both in private and government practice to
hoodwink the poor patients’ relatives to abscond liability in
courts of law.
No
proper diagnosis in most cases and no postmortems!
Clothing
industry is robust and cloths are cheap.
Public
and private transport is in dilapidated state.
I
have a saying that if we “Abolish The Post of Presidency” (real
white elephant) for 10 years, we can improve the transport system
including introducing few domestic air lines, for people in the
North, instead of giving India our air space to drop Mysoor dhal
(Parippu) in crisis.
Never
trust Indian Politicians.
They
bring AIDS (kidney donors, etc), Malaria and exotic diseases from
their own hospitals.
I
love Indian cricketers including Kholi, so do not take it as an
Indian slur.
Our
monks are fabulously rich and now devote more time on politics than
the spread of Dhamma.
They,
more or less spread hate on minorities and Islam (phobia)!
Learning
second language especially English is poorer than Bangladesh, if not
India. Read either Sinhala or Tamil papers.
Television
/ Media are owned by partisan individuals.
There
is no balanced reporting.
Political
parties have NO democratic ways and are almost owned by individuals.
They
are hegemonies.
Latest
is religious hegemony.
Election
commissioner has failed to admonish religious and astrological
hegemony in spite of blatant violation of the election law.
He
only talks.
NATO.
No
Action
Talk
Only
SHOW.
We
applaud him for his failures.
This
is a very good article.
We
in Ceylon manipulate these figures to hoodwink the WHO and UNO.
Average
Income in the USA by Family and Household 
Updated
  September 16, 2019 
  
 
 
Average
 income is any statistic that describes how much money an individual,
 family, or household makes. The U.S. Census Bureau reports average
 U.S. incomes in September of each year.
 
The
 Census reports two kinds of averages. The mean sums up all incomes
 and divides by the number of people reporting. The median income is
 the point where half the people make more and half make less. The
 mean income is usually higher. That's because the few people who
 make enormous amounts of money skew the results higher. In the mean,
 they outweigh the many who make low incomes. That gives an
 inaccurate estimate because it's affected by the income inequality
 in the United States. For this reason, most reports use the median
 income.
 
The
 Census reports average income for three different groups:
 
- 
Income
  per person is the income for each person at age 15 or older. It's
  more commonly known as income per capita.
 
- 
Family
  income is average for a family of two or more related people living
  in a household. They can be related by birth, marriage, or
  adoption.
 
- 
Household
  income is the average income of all people living in a housing
  unit. It doesn't matter if they are living alone, with a family, or
  with a group of unrelated individuals.
   
- 
Real
  income removes the effects of inflation. To compare income levels
  over time, you must use real income. Nominal income ignores the
  changing cost of living. That's also the difference between real
  versus nominal GDP.
  
 
When
 looking at average income, you must pay attention to what it
 measures specifically. Always determine whether it's the mean or
 median. Find out whether it's per capita, family, or household. Last
 but not least, be sure you know whether it's real or nominal.
The
 Census breaks out average incomes for many different groups. These
 include age, relationship to the household, race, education, and
 type of housing. It reports income levels in $2,500 increments. The
 Census will release the next report on 2018 average incomes in
 September 2019.
2017
Average Income 
The
 2017 nominal median income per capita was $31,786. The mean income
 per capita was $48,150. The Census Bureau reports those in the
 Current Population Survey, Table PINC-01.
Real
 median household income was $61,372.
At
 first glance, it was a new record, but the Census warns that it
 modified its questions. As a result, the household income was about
 the same as in 2007 and 1999. The Census reports household income in
 Table HINC-01.
The
 federal government uses the median household income to establish
 poverty levels. That determines eligibility for Obamacare subsidies
 and welfare programs.
Real
 median family income was $75,938. The real mean family income was
 $100,400. The government uses the family income for statistical
 purposes, such as reporting the poverty threshold. The Census
 reports family income in Table FINC-01.
U.S.
Average Income Has Caught Up
The
 table below compares the change in income through the 2001 and 2008
 recessions. Incomes didn't start improving until 2006, just as the
 seeds of the 2008 financial crisis were being planted. That's when
 the Federal Reserve raised interest rates. As mortgages became more
 expensive, homes prices fell. Mortgage defaults began to rise. But
 the crisis didn't spread to the general economy until 2008. The Dow
 hit its peak in November 2007.
Most
 of the jobs created before the recession were in financial services
 and construction. Those jobs did not return in 2009. Instead, jobs
 were in low-paying areas such as retail and food services. Many
 employers hired temporary or freelance workers instead of offering
 full-time positions.
To
 make matters worse, the government did not create jobs. The Bush
 administration relied on tax cuts and military spending to boost the
 economy. Neither are good job creators. President Obama had the
 right idea in spending more on education and public works. Those
 types of programs are the best unemployment solutions.
After
 the 2010 mid-term elections, the Republican majority in Congress
 focused on reducing the debt instead of creating jobs. The
 unemployment rate fell as people dropped out of the labor force, but
 incomes did not rise.
In
 2013, the Fed did what it could by keeping interest rates low. But
 those low rates created an asset bubble in the stock market, which
 hit new highs. At the same time, average income levels briefly rose.
In
 2014, new technology in shale oil drilling boosted incomes in
 Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraska, but
 incomes fell in those areas when oil prices did. Washington D.C. and
 the states around it, specifically West Virginia, Virginia, and
 Maryland, also improved.
In
 2015, income levels rose as unemployment fell. The situation further
 improved in 2016, when the average income exceeded the pre-recession
 peak.
Historical
Real Median Household Income, Economic Growth, and Unemployment 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   | Year | 
   Income | 
   Change | 
   GDP
    Growth | 
   Jobless
    Rate | 
   Events | 
  
 
   | 1997 | 
   $55,218 | 
   2.1% | 
   4.4% | 
   4.7% | 
    
  | 
  
   | 1998 | 
   $57,248 | 
   3.7% | 
   4.5% | 
   4.4% | 
   LTCM
    crisis | 
  
   | 1999 | 
   $58,665 | 
   2.5% | 
   4.8% | 
   4.0% | 
   Y2K
    scare | 
  
   | 2000 | 
   $58,544 | 
   -0.2% | 
   4.1% | 
   3.9% | 
   NASDAQ
    bubble burst | 
  
   | 2001 | 
   $57,246 | 
   -2.2% | 
   1.0% | 
   5.7% | 
   EGTRRA,
    9/11 attacks | 
  
   | 2002 | 
   $56,599 | 
   -1.1% | 
   1.7% | 
   6.0% | 
   War
    on Terror | 
  
   | 2003 | 
   $56,528 | 
   -0.1% | 
   2.9% | 
   5.7% | 
   JGTRRA | 
  
   | 2004 | 
   $56,332 | 
   -0.3% | 
   3.8% | 
   5.4% | 
   Business
    growth | 
  
   | 2005 | 
   $56,935 | 
   1.1% | 
   3.5% | 
   4.9% | 
   Incomes
    improve | 
  
   | 2006 | 
   $57,379 | 
   0.8% | 
   2.9% | 
   4.4% | 
   Fed
    raised rates | 
  
   | 2007 | 
   $58,149 | 
   1.3% | 
   1.9% | 
   5.0% | 
   Subprime
    crisis | 
  
   | 2008 | 
   $56,076 | 
   -3.6% | 
   -0.1% | 
   7.3% | 
   Financial
    crisis | 
  
   | 2009 | 
   $55,683 | 
   -0.7% | 
   -2.5% | 
   9.9% | 
   ARRA | 
  
   | 2010 | 
   $54,245 | 
   -2.6% | 
   2.6% | 
   9.3% | 
   Obama
    tax cuts | 
  
   | 2011 | 
   $53,401 | 
   -1.6% | 
   1.6% | 
   8.5% | 
   Austerity
    measures | 
  
   | 2012 | 
   $53,331 | 
   -0.1% | 
   2.2% | 
   7.8% | 
   See
    US 2012Asian crisis | 
  
   | 2013 | 
   $55,214 | 
   3.5% | 
   1.8% | 
   6.7% | 
   LFPR
    drops | 
  
   | 2014 | 
   $54,398 | 
   -1.5% | 
   2.5% | 
   5.6% | 
   Strong
    dollar | 
  
   | 2015 | 
   $57,230 | 
   5.2% | 
   2.9% | 
   5.0% | 
   Natural
    jobless rate | 
  
   | 2016 | 
   $59,039 | 
   3.2% | 
   1.6% | 
   4.7% | 
   Presidential
    race | 
  
   | 2017 | 
   $61,372 | 
   N.A. | 
   2.2% | 
   4.1% | 
   See
    note below | 
  
Poverty
(The
 percentage change for 2017 is not applicable because the Census
 changed the question. Table sources: "Current Population
 Survey," Table FINC-1., U.S. Census, September 13, 2018. "GDP
 Growth Rate by Year," "Unemployment Rate by Year.")
As
 a result of the worsening of the average income, 43.1 million
 Americans lived below the federal poverty threshold. In 2017, that
 was $24,858 for a typical family of four. This is more than just the
 "usual suspects," such as illegal immigrants, inner-city
 poor, and the homeless. This is every third person you meet today.
How
 did this happen?
In
 2008, real wages decreased 0.8%. Real wages measure the purchasing
 power of a family's income. Although wages increased by 3.7% in
 2008, prices rose even more.
U.S.
 wage levels are compressed to compete with pay levels in foreign
 countries such as China and India. They have a much lower cost of
 living. At the same time, the education and skill level of foreign
 labor forces are increasing. Furthermore, technology and the spread
 of English makes it easier to employ foreign workers. Outsourcing
 has hit hardest in call centers and computer programming.
 
 
Capitalism
 requires U.S. companies to employ these lower-cost, skilled
 employees. Otherwise, they will lose market share to international
 competitors.
Does
 the minimum wage keep you out of poverty? 
 
No.
 If you were earning the U.S. minimum wager and you were the only
 breadwinner for a family of four, you would fall beneath the poverty
 line. The minimum wage pays a full-time worker $15,080 a year.
 That's less than the $11.95 per hour needed to keep a family out of
 poverty.
Single
 people earning the minimum wage cannot afford to rent their own
 apartment in any major city. They must rent a room or live with
 roommates. Their best chances to find an apartment are in college
 towns, small towns in low-income states, and in rural areas.
Congress
 has kept the minimum wage the same since 2009. If the minimum wage
 had been adjusted for the cost of living over the last 40 years, it
 would be $10.41 an hour. If it had kept up with executive level pay
 increases, it would be $23/hour. Then the minimum wage would be a
 living wage.
At
 the same time, prices of food and oil increased when the dollar
 declined between 2000 and 2006. The Clean Energy Act raised prices
 by diverting corn crops to the production of ethanol. That raised
 the price of corn, a primary feedstock for beef, also leading to
 higher food prices.
Middle-Class
Income 
The
 U.S. economic crisis spread the pain felt by America's poor and
 working poor to the middle class. While the cost of food and
 gasoline rose, wages stayed the same. The resultant squeeze on the
 middle class led to unprecedented debt levels. Families racked up
 credit
 card debt just
 to pay for their daily lives.
Today,
the middle class has the most economic
mobility of
anyone in America. They can make it to the upper classes. The best
pathway is still education. But it is so expensive it hasbecome a
form of
structural inequality.
As a result, it is difficult for the poor to become wealthy. The
rags-to-riches promise of the
American Dream has
dimmed.