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Affluence in the United States

Affluence refers to an individual's or household's economical and financial advantage in comparison to others.[1] It may be assessed through either income or wealth.

Net Wealth of the United States
  Assets
  Net Wealth
Median U.S. household income per County in 2021, showing the distribution of income geographically in the United States

In absolute terms affluence is a relatively widespread phenomenon in the United States, with over 30% of households having an income exceeding $100,000 per year and over 30% of households having a net worth exceeding $250,000, as of 2019.[2][3] However, when looked at in relative terms, wealth is highly concentrated: the bottom 50% of Americans only share 2% of total household wealth while the top 1% hold 35% of that wealth.

In the United States, as of 2019, the median household income is $60,030 per year and the median household net worth is $97,300, while the mean household income is $89,930 per year and the mean household net worth is $692,100.[2][3]

Income vs. wealth edit

Annual income and accumulated net worth, by age
 
Annual income of U.S. families is near its highest throughout the 35-64 age group.[4]
 
Accumulated net worth of U.S. families peaks in the 65-74 year age group.[5]

While income is often seen as a type of wealth in colloquial language use, wealth and income are two substantially different measures of economic prosperity. Wealth is the total value of net possessions of an individual or household, while income is the total inflow of monetary assets over a given time period. Hence the change in wealth over that time period is equal to the income minus the expenditures in that period. Income is a so-called "flow" variable, while wealth is a so-called "stock" variable.

Income as a metric edit

 
Breakdowns of individuals and households with incomes exceeding $60,000 as of 2005[6][7]
 
The image contains several charts related to U.S. wealth inequality. While U.S. net worth roughly doubled from 2000 to 2016, the gains went primarily to the wealthy.

Affluence in the United States has been attributed in many cases to inherited wealth amounting to "a substantial head start":[8][9] in September 2012, the Institute for Policy Studies found that over 60 percent of the Forbes richest 400 Americans had grown up with substantial privilege.[10]

Income is commonly used to measure affluence, although this is a relative indicator: a middle class person with a personal income of $77,500 annually and a billionaire may both be referred to as affluent, depending on reference groups. An average American with a median income of $32,000[11] ($39,000 for those employed full-time between the ages of 25 and 64)[12] when used as a reference group would justify the personal income in the tenth percentile of $77,500 being described as affluent,[11] but if this earner were compared to an executive of a Fortune 500 company, then the description would not apply.[13][14] Accordingly, marketing firms and investment houses classify those with household incomes exceeding $250,000 as mass affluent, while the threshold upper class is most commonly defined as the top 1% with household incomes commonly exceeding $525,000 annually.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 42% of U.S. households have two income earners, thus making households' income levels higher than personal income levels;[15] the percent of married-couple families with children where both parents work is 59.1%.[16]

In 2005, the economic survey revealed the following income distribution for households and individuals:

  • The top 5% of individuals had six-figure incomes (exceeding $100,000); the top 10% of individuals had incomes exceeding $75,000;[11]
  • The top 5% of households, three quarters of whom had two income earners, had incomes of $166,200 (about 10 times the 2009 US minimum wage, for one income earner, and about 5 times the 2009 US minimum wage for two income earners) or higher,[15] with the top 10% having incomes well in excess of $100,000.[17]
  • The top 0.12% of households had incomes exceeding $1,600,000 annually.[18]

Households may also be differentiated among each other, depending on whether or not they have one or multiple income earners (the high female participation in the economy means that many households have two working members[19]). For example, in 2005 the median household income for a two income earner households was $67,000 while the median income for an individual employed full-time with a graduate degree was in excess of $60,000, demonstrating that nearly half of individuals with a graduate degree have earnings comparable with most dual income households.[12]

By another measure – the number of square feet per person in the home – the average home in the United States has more than 700 square feet per person, 50% – 100% more than in other high-income countries (though this indicator may be regarded as an accident of geography, climate and social preference, both within the US and beyond it) but this metric indicates even those in the lowest income percentiles enjoy more living space than the middle classes in most European nations[failed verification]. Similarly ownership levels of 'gadgets' and access to amenities are exceptionally high compared to many other countries.[20][21]

Overall, the term affluent may be applied to a variety of individuals, households, or other entities, depending on context. Data from the U.S. Census Bureau serves as the main guideline for defining affluence. U.S. government data not only reveal the nation's income distribution but also the demographic characteristics of those to whom the term "affluent", may be applied.[15]

Wealth edit

Wealth in the United States is commonly measured in terms of net worth, which is the sum of all assets, including the market value of real estate, like a home, minus all liabilities.[22] The United States is the wealthiest country in the world.[23]

 
U.S. Household and non-profit Net Worth 1959 – 2016, nominal and real (2016 dollars). It reached a record $93 trillion in Q4 2016.

For example, a household in possession of an $800,000 house, $5,000 in mutual funds, $30,000 in cars, $20,000 worth of stock in their own company, and a $45,000 IRA would have assets totaling $900,000. Assuming that this household would have a $250,000 mortgage, $40,000 in car loans, and $10,000 in credit card debt, its debts would total $300,000. Subtracting the debts from the worth of this household's assets (900,000 − $300,000 = $600,000), this household would have a net worth of $600,000. Net worth can vary with fluctuations in value of the underlying assets.

As one would expect, households with greater income often have the highest net worths, though high income cannot be taken as an always accurate indicator of net worth. Overall the number of wealthier households is on the rise, with baby boomers hitting the highs of their careers.[22] In addition, wealth is unevenly distributed, with the wealthiest 25% of US households owning 87%[24] of the wealth in the United States, which was $54.2 trillion in 2009.[25][26]

U.S. household and non-profit organization net worth rose from $44.2 trillion in Q1 2000 to a pre-recession peak of $67.7 trillion in Q3 2007. It then fell $13.1 trillion to $54.6 trillion in Q1 2009 due to the subprime mortgage crisis. It then recovered, rising consistently to $86.8 trillion by Q4 2015. This is nearly double the 2000 level.[27]

Mechanisms to gain wealth edit

Assets are known as the raw materials of wealth, and they consist primarily of stocks and other financial and non-financial property, particularly homeownership.[28] While tangible assets are unequally distributed, financial assets are much more unequal. In 2004, the top 1% controlled 50.3% of the financial assets while the bottom 90% held only 14.4% of the total US financial assets.[28]

These discrepancies exist because the many wealth building tools established by the Federal Government work better for high earners. These include 401k plans, 403b plans, and IRAs. Traditional IRAs, 401k and 403b plans are tax shelters created for working individuals. These plans allow for tax sheltered (or pre-tax) contributions of earned income directly to tax sheltered savings accounts. Annual contributions are capped to ensure that high earners cannot enjoy the tax benefit disproportionately. The Roth IRA is another tool that can help create wealth in the working and middle classes.

Assets in Roth IRAs grow tax free; interests, dividends, and capital gains are all exempt from income taxes. Contributions to Roth IRAs are limited to those with annual incomes less than the threshold established yearly by the IRS. The benefits of these plans, however, are only available to workers and families whose incomes and expenses allow them excess funds to commit for a long period, typically until the investor reaches age 59½. The effect of these tools are further limited by the contribution limits placed on them.

Including human capital such as skills, the United Nations International Human Dimensions Programme estimated the total wealth of the United States in 2008 to be $118 trillion.[29][30]

Top percentiles of income edit

Affluence and economic standing within society are often expressed in terms of percentile ranking. The economic ranking is conducted either in terms of giving lower thresholds for a designated group (e.g. the top 5%, 10%, 15%, etc.) or in terms of the percentage of households/individuals with incomes above a certain threshold (e.g. above $75,000, $100,000, $150,000, etc.). The table below presents 2006 income data in terms of the lower thresholds for the given percentages (e.g. the top 25.6% of households had incomes exceeding $80,000, compared to $47,000 for the top quarter of individuals).[11][17]

Data Top third Top quarter Top quintile Top 15% Top 10% Top 5% Top 3% Top 1.5% Top 0.1%[18]
Household income[17]
Lower threshold (annual gross income) $65,000 $80,000 $91,202 $100,000 $118,200 $166,200 $200,000 $250,000 $1,600,000
Exact percentage of households 34.72% 25.60% 20.00% 17.80% 10.00% 5.00% 2.67% 1.50% 0.12%
Personal income (age 25+)[11]
Lower threshold (annual gross income) $37,500 $47,500 $52,500 $62,500 $75,000 $100,000 N/A
Exact percentage of individuals 33.55% 24.03% 19.74% 14.47% 10.29% 5.63% N/A

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2006[11][17]

Household income over time edit

Household income changes over time, with income gains being substantially larger for the upper percentiles than for the lower percentiles.[31] All areas of the income strata have seen their incomes rise since the late 1960s, especially during the late 1990s.[32] The overall increase in household income is not the result of an increase in the percentage of households with more than one income earner. In fact, the lowest 50% population have become very poor[citation needed] sharing just 2% of wealth in spite of modern social practice of more than one working person, mostly women in the household. But the myth is highly prevalent and promoted by media. The standard of living of a 1960s single working parent can only be afforded today when both parents work due to disproportionate distribution of wealth today:[19]

In about 2003, Elizabeth Warren said that "the typical middle-class household in the United States is no longer a one-earner family, with one parent in the workforce and one at home full-time. Instead, the majority of families with small children now have both parents rising at dawn to commute to jobs so they can both pull in paychecks... Today the median income for a fully employed male is ...nearly $800 less than his counterpart of a generation ago. The only real increase in wages for a family has come from the second paycheck earned by a working mother."[19]

Two income-earner households are more common among the top quintile of households than the general population: 2006 U.S. Census Bureau data indicates that over three quarters, 76%, of households in the top quintile, with annual incomes exceeding $91,200, had two or more income earners compared to just 42% among the general population and a small minority in the bottom three quintiles. As a result, much of the rising income inequity between the upper and lower percentiles can be explained through the increasing percentage of households with two or more incomes.[19][31]

Data 2003 2000 1997 1994 1991 1988 1985 1982 1979 1976 1973 1970 1967
20th percentile $17,984 $19,142 $17,601 $16,484 $16,580 $17,006 $16,306 $15,548 $16,457 $15,615 $15,844 $15,126 $14,002
Median (50th) $43,318 $44,853 $42,294 $39,613 $39,679 $40,678 $38,510 $36,811 $38,649 $36,155 $37,700 $35,832 $33,338
80th percentile $86,867 $87,341 $81,719 $77,154 $74,759 $75,593 $71,433 $66,920 $68,318 $63,247 $64,500 $60,148 $55,265
95th percentile $154,120 $155,121 $144,636 $134,835 $126,969 $127,958 $119,459 $111,516 $111,445 $100,839 $102,243 $95,090 $88,678

Source: U.S. Census Bureau (2004): "Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2003", p. 36 et seq. All figures are inflation-adjusted and given in 2003 dollars.[32]

Income distribution over time edit

 
Relative income growth, organized by percentile classes, normalized to 1970 levels. Graph accounts for both income growth, and the hidden decline in the progressivity of the tax code at the top, the wealthiest earners having seen their effective tax rates steadily fall.[33]
 
Same data[33] as adjacent chart, but plotted on logarithmic scale to show absolute dollar amounts.

According to the Congressional Budget Office, between 1979 and 2007 incomes of the top 1% of Americans grew by an average of 275%. During the same time period, the 60% of Americans in the middle of the income scale saw their income rise by 40%. From 1992 to 2007 the top 400 income earners in the U.S. saw their income increase 392% and their average tax rate reduced by 37%.[34] In 2009, the average income of the top 1% was $960,000 with a minimum income of $343,927.[35][36][37]

During the economic expansion between 2002 and 2007, the income of the top 1% grew 10 times faster than the income of the bottom 90%. In this period 66% of total income gains went to the 1%, who in 2007 had a larger share of total income than at any time since 1928.[36] According to PolitiFact and others, the top 400 wealthiest Americans "have more wealth than half of all Americans combined."[38][39][40][41] Inherited wealth may help explain why many Americans who have become rich may have had a "substantial head start".[8][9] In September 2012, according to the Institute for Policy Studies, "over 60 percent" of the Forbes richest 400 Americans "grew up in substantial privilege".[10]

If a family has a positive net worth then it has more wealth than the combined net worth of over 30.6 million American families. This is because the bottom 25% of American families have a negative combined net worth.[42]

Complications in interpreting income statistics edit

Interpreting these income statistics is complicated by several factors: membership in the top 1% changes from year to year, the IRS made large changes in the definition of adjusted gross income in 1987, and numbers for particular income ranges may be distorted by outliers (in the top segment) and failure to include transfer payments (in the lower segments).

Regarding Income Mobility, the IRS occasionally studies income data from actual households over time, usually over one decade. Their results underestimate income mobility by excluding those under age 25, the most mobile population, from their studies.

Many people[43][44][45][who?] look only at annual reported income data split into income quintiles. It is erroneous to assume that individual households remain in the same quintile over time, just as it usually is when using aggregate data. A majority of households in the top income quintile in one year, for example, will have moved to a lower quintile within a decade. Three out of four households in the top 0.01% of income will no longer be in that small group ten years later. In summary, half of all of U.S. households move from one income quintile to a different income quintile every decade. And actual households who started a decade in the lowest quintile of income, when tracked over the next ten years, will have proportionally more income growth than actual households who started the decade in the highest quintile of income. Thus, when comparing income/wealth quintile distributions from different time periods, generalizations can only be made with regards to the households in aggregate for each quintile, and can not be made to any individual households over the same time period (i.e. assuming the wealth value has been appropriately adjusted for differences in time, one cannot infer that a decrease in total wealth percentage for one quintile over time means that the households from that quintile have lost wealth as individuals, but only that total wealth percentage has decreased for those in that quintile at the time of measurement).

Top 20% income vs. the bottom 20% income households:

  1. The average number of people with jobs in a top income quintile household is two, while a majority of bottom-income-quintile households have no-one employed.
  2. If there are two adult income earners in a household who are married, their incomes are combined on tax forms. This is very common among top-quintile-income households. The lowest-quintile households, however, include a lot more single-person households, or two unmarried working adults living together and sharing expenses, but reporting their incomes to the IRS as if they were two separate households.
  3. 75%...80%[clarification needed] of actual income for bottom-quintile-households consists of specific transfer payments from social or relief programs (aka "welfare" and other benefits), which payments are not included in IRS data as income. The top income quintile gets a very small percentage of their actual income from transfer payments.
  4. The IRS warns against comparisons of pre-1987 and post-1987 income data due to significant changes in the definition of adjusted gross income (AGI) that made top-quintile households appear to have large reported income gains, when in fact there was no change to their income at all. In addition to AGI changes, large marginal tax rate reductions during the Reagan Administration caused another large change in tax reporting. A lot of corporate income formerly reported on corporate tax returns was switched to lower-tax-rate individual tax returns (as Subchapter S corporations). This reporting change appeared to boost top-quintile income, when in fact their incomes had not changed. As a result, the top income quintile for households today includes a lot of corporate income previously reported in corporate tax returns, while Subchapter S corporations that lose money, are likely to be included in the bottom-income-quintile households. Income comparisons that compare pre-1987 to post-1987 income, are very common, but they are also biased, according to the IRS, and should be ignored.[46]

Impact of age and experience: people that are older and have more experience, tend to have considerably larger incomes than younger and inexperienced workers. Normalizing for age and experience is rarely an effective statistical compensation, as each elderly citizen began as inexperienced.

Median income levels edit

Median household income by selected characteristics [47]
Type of household Race and Hispanic origin Region
All households Family
households
Nonfamily
households
Asian Non-Hispanic White Hispanic
(of any race)
Black Northeast Midwest South West
$70,784 $91,162 $41,797 $101,418 $77,999 $57,981 $48,297 $77,422 $71,129 $63,368 $79,430
Median household income by selected characteristics cont.
Age of Householder Nativity of Householder Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) Status Educational Attainment of Householder*
Under 65 years 65 years and older Native-born Foreign-born Inside MSA Outside MSA No high school diploma High school, no college Some college Bachelor's degree or higher
$80,734 $47,620 $71,522 $66,043 $73,823 $53,750 $30,378 $50,401 $64,378 $115,456
*Householders aged 25 and older. In 2021, the median household income for this group was $72,046.
Median earnings by work status and sex (Persons, aged 15 years and older with earnings)
Total workers Full-Time, year-round workers
Both sexes Male Female Both sexes Male Female
$45,470 $50,983 $39,201 $56,473 $61,180 $51,226
2020 Median earnings & household income by educational attainment [48] [49]
Measure Overall Less than 9th grade Some High School High school graduate Some college Associate's degree Bachelor's degree or higher Bachelor's degree Master's degree Professional degree Doctorate degree
Persons, age 25+ w/ earnings* $46,985 $25,162 $26,092 $34,540 $39,362 $42,391 $66,423 $60,705 $71,851 $102,741 $101,526
Male, age 25+ w/ earnings* $52,298 $30,089 $31,097 $40,852 $47,706 $52,450 $80,192 $71,666 $91,141 $126,584 $121,956
Female, age 25+ w/ earnings* $40,392 $18,588 $19,504 $27,320 $31,837 $36,298 $57,355 $51,154 $62,522 $92,780 $85,551
Persons, age 25+, employed full-time $59,371 $33,945 $34,897 $42,417 $50,640 $52,285 $77,105 $71,283 $82,183 $130,466 $119,552
Household $69,228 $29,609 $29,520 $47,405 $60,392 $68,769 $106,936 $100,128 $114,900 $151,560 $142,493
*Total work experience
Household income distribution
10th percentile 20th percentile 30th percentile 40th percentile 50th percentile 60th percentile 70th percentile 80th percentile 90th percentile 95th percentile
≤ $15,700 ≤ $28,000 ≤ $40,500 ≤ $55,000 $70,800 ≤ $89,700 ≤ $113,200 ≤ $149,100 ≤ $212,100 ≤ $286,300
Source: US Census Bureau, 2021; income statistics for the year 2021

Wealth distribution edit

Net personal wealth in the U.S. since 1962
 
The average personal wealth of people in the top 1% is more than a thousand times that of people in bottom 50%.[50]
 
The logarithmic scale shows how wealth has increased for all percentile groups, though moreso for wealthier people.[50]

According to an analysis that excludes pensions and social security, the richest 1% of the American population in 2007 owned 34.6% of the country's total wealth, and the next 19% owned 50.5%. Thus, the top 20% of Americans owned 85% of the country's wealth and the bottom 80% of the population owned 15%. Financial inequality was greater than inequality in total wealth, with the top 1% of the population owning 42.7%, the next 19% of Americans owning 50.3%, and the bottom 80% owning 7%.[51] However, according to the federal reserve, "For most households, pensions and Social Security are the most important sources of income during retirement, and the promised benefit stream constitutes a sizable fraction of household wealth" and "including pensions and Social Security in net worth makes the distribution more even".[52] When including household wealth from pensions and social security, the richest 1% of the American population in 1992 owned 16% of the country's total wealth, as opposed to 32% when excluding pensions and social security.

After the Great Recession which started in 2007, the share of total wealth owned by the top 1% of the population grew from 34.6% to 37.1%, and that owned by the top 20% of Americans grew from 85% to 87.7%. The Great Recession also caused a drop of 36.1% in median household wealth but a drop of only 11.1% for the top 1%.[53][51]

Income inequality edit

Economists and related experts have described America's growing income inequality as "deeply worrying",[54] unjust,[55] a danger to democracy/social stability,[56][57][58] and a sign of national decline.[59] Yale professor Robert Shiller, who was among three Americans who won the Nobel prize for economics in 2013, said after receiving the award, "The most important problem that we are facing now today, I think, is rising inequality in the United States and elsewhere in the world."[60]

Changes in wealth edit

1989–2001 edit

When observing the changes in the wealth among American households, one can note an increase in wealthier individuals and a decrease in the number of poor households, while net worth increased most substantially in semi-wealthy and wealthy households. Overall the percentage of households with a negative net worth (more debt than assets) declined from 9.5% in 1989 to 4.1% in 2001.[22]

The percentage of net worths ranging from $500,000 to one million doubled while the percentage of millionaires tripled.[22] From 1995 to 2004, there was tremendous growth among household wealth, as it nearly doubled from $21.9 trillion to $43.6 trillion, but the wealthiest quartile of the economic distribution made up 89% of this growth.[25] During this time frame, wealth became increasingly unequal, and the wealthiest 25% became even wealthier.

According to U.S. Census Bureau statistics, this 'upward shift' is most likely the result of a booming housing market which caused homeowners to experience tremendous increases in home equity. Life-cycles have also attributed to the rising wealth among Americans. With more and more baby-boomers reaching the climax of their careers and the middle-aged population making up a larger segment of the population now than ever before, more and more households have achieved comfortable levels of wealth.[22] Zhu Xiao Di (2004) notes, that household wealth usually peaks around families headed by people in their 50s, and as a result, the baby boomer generation reached this age range at the time of the analysis.[25]

After 2007 edit

Household net worth fell from 2007 to 2009 by a total of $17.5 trillion or 25.5%. This was the equivalent loss of one year of GDP.[61] By the fourth quarter of 2010, the household net worth had recovered by a growth of 1.3 percent to a total of $56.8 trillion. An additional growth of 15.7 percent is needed just to bring the value to where it was before the recession started in December 2007.[24] In 2014 a record breaking net worth of $80.7 trillion was achieved.[62]

Professions edit

According to the University of Chicago, the top 1% is primarily made up of owner-managers of small to medium-sized businesses of which the most profitable are physician's and dentist's offices, professional and technical services, specialty trade contracting, legal services. The typical business has $7 million in sales and 57 employees. With a 10% profit margin, this will place two business partners in the top 1%.

The remainder of the top 1% tends to be the classic professions: medicine, dentistry, law, engineering, finance, and corporate executive management.

A correlation has been shown between increases in income and increases in worker satisfaction. Increasing worker satisfaction, however, is not solely a result of the increase in income: workers in more complex and higher level occupations tend to have attained higher levels of education and thus are more likely to have a greater degree of autonomy in the workplace.[63] Additionally, higher level workers with advanced degrees are hired to share their personal knowledge, to conceptualize, and to consult. Higher-level workers typically suffer less job alienation and reap not only external benefits in terms of income from their jobs, but also enjoy high levels of intrinsic motivation and satisfaction.[14][63]

In the United States, the highest earning occupational group is referred to as white collar professionals. Individuals in this occupational classification tend to report the highest job satisfaction and highest incomes. Defining income based on title of a profession can be misleading, given that a professional title may indicate the type of education received, but does not always correlate with the actual day to day income-generating endeavors that are pursued.

Some sources cite the profession of physician in the United States as the highest paying,[14] Physician (MD and DO) and Dentist (DMD and DDS) compensation ranks as the highest median annual earnings of all professions. Median annual earnings ranged from $149,310 for general dentists and $156,010 for family physicians to $321,686 for anesthesiologists. Surgeons post a median annual income of $282,504.[64] However, the annual salary for Chief Executive Officer (C.E.O.) is projected quite differently based on source: Salary.com reports a median salary of $634,941,[65] while the U.S. Department of Labor in May 2004 reported the median as $140,350.[66] This is primarily due to a methodological difference in terms of which companies were surveyed. Overall annual earnings among the nation's top 25 professions ranged from the $70,000s to the $300,000s.

In addition to physicians, lawyers, physicists, and nuclear engineers were all among the nation's 20 highest paid occupations with incomes in excess of $78,410.[67] Some of the other occupations in the high five-figure range were economists with a median of $72,780,[68] mathematicians with $81,240,[69] financial managers with $81,880,[70] and software publishers with median annual earnings of $73,060.[71] The median annual earnings of wage-and-salary pharmacists in May 2006 were $94,520. The median annual earnings of wage-and-salary engineers in November 2011 were $90,000. The middle 50 percent earned between $83,180 and $108,140 a year (as in the Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2008–09 Edition by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics).

Education edit

 
Median household and personal income by educational attainment
 
Ivy-Plus admissions rates vary with the income of the students' parents, with the acceptance rate of the top 0.1% income percentile being almost twice as much as other students.[72]

Educational attainment plays a major factor in determining an individual's economic disposition. Personal income varied greatly according to an individual's education, as did household income.

Incomes for those employed, full-time, year-round and over the age of twenty-five ranged from $20,826 ($17,422 if including those who worked part-time[11]) for those with less than a ninth grade education to $100,000 for those with professional degrees ($82,473 if including those who work part-time[11]). The median income for individuals with doctorates was $79,401 ($70,853 if including those who work part-time[11]).[73]

These statistics reveal that the majority of those employed full-time with professional or doctoral degrees are among the overall top 10% (15% if including those who work part-time) of income earners. Of those with a master's degree, nearly 50% were among the top quarter of income earners (top third if including those who work part-time).[11]

Religion edit

Individuals of a broad variety of religious backgrounds have become wealthy in America. However, the majority of these individuals follow Mainline Protestant denominations; Episcopalians[74] and Presbyterians are most prevalent.[75] According to a 2016 study by the Pew Research Center, Jewish again ranked as the most financially successful religious group in the United States, with 44% of Jews living in households with incomes of at least $100,000, followed by Hindu (36%), Episcopalians (35%), and Presbyterians (32%).[76] Owing to their numbers, more Catholics (13.3 million) reside in households with a yearly income of $100,000 or more than any other religious group.[76]

According to the same study there is a correlation between education and income, about 77% of American Hindus have an undergraduate degree and according to a study in 2020, they are earning the highest with median income $137,000, followed by Jews (59%), Episcopalians (56%), and Presbyterians (47%).[77]

Race edit

 
Percent of households with six figure incomes and individuals with incomes in the top 10%, exceeding $77,500

Recent U.S. Census Bureau publications indicate a strong correlation between race and affluence. In the top household income quintile (households with incomes exceeding $91,200), Asian Americans and Whites were over represented, whereas Hispanics and African Americans were underrepresented.

In 2006, the household income for Asian Americans was, at $61,094, by far the highest,[78] exceeding that of Whites ($48,554) by 26%.[79] Over a quarter, 27.5%, of Asian American households had incomes exceeding $100,000, and another 40% had incomes of over $75,000.[80]

Among White households, who remained near the national median, 18.3% had six figure incomes, while 28.9% had incomes exceeding $75,000.[79] The percentages of households with incomes exceeding $100,000 and $75,000 were far below the national medians for Hispanic and African American households.[81] Among Hispanic households, for example, only 9% had six figure incomes, and 17% had incomes exceeding $75,000.[82] The race gap remained when considering personal income. In 2005, roughly 11% of Asian Americans[83] and 7% of White individuals[84] had six figure incomes, compared to 2.6% among Hispanics[85] and 2.3% among African Americans.[86]

The racial breakdowns of income brackets further illustrate the racial disparities associated with affluence. in 2005, 81.8% of all 114 million households were White (including White Hispanics),[79] 12.2% were African American,[81] 10.9% were Hispanic[82] and 3.7% were Asian American.[78][87]

While White households are always near the national median due to Whites being by far the most prevalent racial demographic, the percentages of minority households with incomes exceeding $100,000 strayed considerably from their percentage of the overall population: Asian Americans, who represent the smallest surveyed racial demographic in the overall population, were found to be the prevalent minority among six figure income households.

Among the nearly twenty million households with six figure incomes, 86.9% were White,[79] 5.9% were Asian American,[78] 5.6% were Hispanic[82] and 5.5% were African American.[81] Among the general individual population with earnings, 82.1% were White,[84] 12.7% were Hispanic,[85] 11.0% were African American[86] and 4.6% were Asian American.[83]

Of the top 10% of income earners, those nearly 15 million individuals with incomes exceeding $77,500, Whites and Asians were once again over-represented with the percentages of African Americans and Hispanics trailing behind considerably. Of the top 10% of earners, 86.7% were White.[84] Asian Americans were the prevalent minority, constituting 6.8% of top 10% income earners, nearly twice the percentage of Asian Americans among the general population.[83]

Hispanics, who were the prevalent minority in the general population of income earners, constituted only 5.2% of those in the top 10%,[85] with African Americans being the least represented with 5.1%.[86]

Race Overall median High school Some college College graduate Bachelor's degree Master's degree Doctoral degree
Total population All, age 25+ 32,140 26,505 31,054 49,303 43,143 52,390 70,853
Full-time workers, age 25–64 39,509 31,610 37,150 56,027 50,959 61,324 79,292
White alone All, age 25+ 33,030 27,311 31,564 49,972 43,833 52,318 71,268
Full-time workers, age 25–64 40,422 32,427 38,481 56,903 51,543 61,441 77,906
Asian alone All, age 25+ 36,152 25,285 29,982 51,481 42,466 61,452 69,653
Full-time workers, age 25–64 42,109 27,041 33,120 60,532 51,040 71,316 91,430
African American All, age 25+ 27,101 22,379 27,648 44,534 41,572 48,266 61,894
Full-time workers, age 25–64 32,021 26,230 32,392 47,758 45,505 52,858 N/A
Hispanic or Latino All, age 25+ 23,613 22,941 28,698 41,596 37,819 50,901 67,274
Full-time workers, age 25–64 27,266 26,461 33,120 46,594 41,831 53,880 N/A

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2006[88]

Status and stratification edit

Economic well-being is often associated with high societal status, yet income and economic compensation are a function of scarcity and act as only one of a number of indicators of social class. It is in the interest of all of society that open positions are adequately filled with a competent occupant enticed to do his or her best.[14] As a result, an occupation that requires a scarce skill, the attainment of which is often documented through an educational degree, and entrusts its occupant with a high degree of influence will generally offer high economic compensation.

To put it another way, the high income is intended to ensure that the desired individuals obtain the necessary skills (e.g. medical or graduate school) and complete their tasks with the necessary vigor[89] but differences in income may, however, be found among occupations of similar sociological nature: the median annual earnings of a physician were in excess of $150,000 in May 2004, compared to $95,000 for an attorney.[64][67] Both occupations require finely tuned and scarce skill sets and both are essential to the well-being of society, yet physicians out-earned attorneys and other upper middle class professionals by a wide margin as their skill-sets are deemed especially scarce.

Overall, high status positions tend to be those requiring a scarce skill and are therefore commonly far better compensated than those in the middle of the occupational strata.[14][89]

...It is essential that the duties of the positions be performed with the diligence that their importance requires. Inevitably, then, a society must have, first, some kind of rewards that it can use as inducements, and, second, some way of distributing these rewards differently according to positions. The rewards and their distribution become part of the social order... If the rights and perquisites of different positions in a society must be unequal, then society must be stratified... Hence every society... must differentiate persons... and must therefore possess a certain amount of institutionalized inequality.

— Kingsley Davis & Wilbert E. Moore, "Some Principles of Stratification", republished in Social Class and Stratification[89]

It is important to note that the above is an ideal type, a simplified model of reality using optimal circumstances. In reality other factors such as discrimination based on race, ethnicity and gender as well as aggressive political lobbying by certain professional organizations also influence personal income. An individual's personal career decisions, as well as his or her personal connections within the nation's economic institutions, are also likely to have an effect on income, status and whether or not an individual may be referred to as affluent.[13]

In contemporary America it is a combination of all these factors, with scarcity remaining by far the most prominent one, which determine a person's economic compensation. Due to higher status professions requiring advanced and thus less commonly found skill sets (including the ability to supervise and work with a considerable autonomy), these professions are better compensated through the means of income, making high status individuals affluent, depending on reference group.[14]

While the two paragraphs above only describe the relationship between status and personal income, household income is also often used to infer status. As a result, the dual income phenomenon presents yet another problem in equating affluence with high societal status. As mentioned earlier in the article, 42% of households have two or more income earners, and 76% of households with six figure incomes have two or more income earners.[15] Furthermore, people are most likely to marry their professional and societal equals.

It therefore becomes apparent that the majority of households with incomes exceeding the six figure mark are the result of an economic as well as personal union between two economic equals. Today, two nurses, each making $55,000 a year, can easily out-earn a single attorney who makes the median of $95,000 annually.[67][90] Despite household income rising drastically through the union of two economic equals, neither individual has advanced his or her function and position within society. Yet the household (not the individual) may have become more affluent, assuming an increase in household members does not offset the dual-income derived gains.

Academic class models
Dennis Gilbert, 2002 William Thompson & Joseph Hickey, 2005 Leonard Beeghley, 2004
Class Typical characteristics Class Typical characteristics Class Typical characteristics
Capitalist class (1%) Top-level executives, high-rung politicians, heirs. Ivy League education common. Upper class (1%) Top-level executives, celebrities, heirs; income of $500,000+ common. Ivy league education common. The super-rich (0.9%) Multi-millionaires whose incomes commonly exceed $3.5 million or more; includes celebrities and powerful executives/politicians. Ivy League education common.
Upper middle class[1] (15%) Highly-educated (often with graduate degrees), most commonly salaried, professionals and middle management with large work autonomy. Upper middle class[1] (15%) Highly-educated (often with graduate degrees) professionals & managers with household incomes varying from the high 5-figure range to commonly above $100,000. The rich (5%) Households with net worth of $1 million or more; largely in the form of home equity. Generally have college degrees.
Middle class (plurality/
majority?; ca. 46%)
College-educated workers with considerably higher-than-average incomes and compensation; a man making $57,000 and a woman making $40,000 may be typical.
Lower middle class (30%) Semi-professionals and craftsmen with a roughly average standard of living. Most have some college education and are white-collar. Lower middle class (32%) Semi-professionals and craftsmen with some work autonomy; household incomes commonly range from $35,000 to $75,000. Typically, some college education.
Working class (30%) Clerical and most blue-collar workers whose work is highly routinized. Standard of living varies depending on number of income earners, but is commonly just adequate. High school education.
Working class (32%) Clerical, pink- and blue-collar workers with often low job security; common household incomes range from $16,000 to $30,000. High school education. Working class
(ca. 40–45%)
Blue-collar workers and those whose jobs are highly routinized with low economic security; a man making $40,000 and a woman making $26,000 may be typical. High school education.
Working poor (13%) Service, low-rung clerical and some blue-collar workers. High economic insecurity and risk of poverty. Some high school education.
Lower class (ca. 14–20%) Those who occupy poorly-paid positions or rely on government transfers. Some high school education.
Underclass (12%) Those with limited or no participation in the labor force. Reliant on government transfers. Some high school education. The poor (ca. 12%) Those living below the poverty line with limited to no participation in the labor force; a household income of $18,000 may be typical. Some high school education.
References: Gilbert, D. (2002) The American Class Structure: In An Age of Growing Inequality. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, ISBN 0534541100. (see also Gilbert Model);
Thompson, W. & Hickey, J. (2005). Society in Focus. Boston, MA: Pearson, Allyn & Bacon; Beeghley, L. (2004). The Structure of Social Stratification in the United States. Boston, MA: Pearson, Allyn & Bacon.
1 The upper middle class may also be referred to as "Professional class" Ehrenreich, B. (1989). The Inner Life of the Middle Class. NY, NY: Harper-Collins.

Extreme affluence edit

 
The wide income discrepancies within the top 1.5% of households

As of 2002, there were approximately 146,000 (0.1%) households with incomes exceeding $1,500,000, while the top 0.01% or 11,000 households had incomes exceeding $5,500,000. The 400 highest tax payers in the nation had gross annual household incomes exceeding $87,000,000. Household incomes for this group have risen more dramatically than for any other. As a result, the gap between those who make less than one and half million dollars annually (99.9% of households) and those who make more (0.1%) has been steadily increasing, prompting The New York Times to proclaim that the "Richest Are Leaving Even the Rich Far Behind."[91]

The income disparities within the top 1.5% are quite drastic.[92] While households in the top 1.5% of households had incomes exceeding $250,000, 443% above the national median, their incomes were still 2200% lower than those of the top 0.1% of households.

Wealth statistics edit

The total value of all U.S. household wealth in 2000 was approximately $44 trillion. Prior to the Late-2000s recession which began in December 2007 its value was at $65.9 trillion. After, it plunged to $48.5 trillion during the first quarter of 2009. The total household net worth rose 1.3% by the fourth quarter of 2009 to $54.2 trillion, indicating the American economy is recovering.

Family net worth, by selected characteristics of families, 1989–2013 surveys[93]
Thousands of 2013 dollars. Excluding net worth from pensions and social security.
Family characteristic 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013
Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean
All families 85.06 342.3 80.75 303.94 87.73 323.49 102.5 405.47 113.91 522.08 114.81 553.87 135.86 625.17 82.52 530.4 81.4 528.42
Percentile of income
Less than 20 3.47 44.64 6.4 54.14 9.05 67.76 8.25 70.85 10.37 70 9.15 88.24 9.87 118.86 6.49 125.24 6.2 87.53
20–39.9 44.83 123.03 45.09 105.32 52.67 121.87 49.46 139.66 50.61 155.16 42.38 151.95 42.44 151 29.69 139.27 21.5 111.35
40–59.9 76.13 185.52 64.26 164.79 69.52 154.09 76.26 179.75 83.7 214.46 89.34 241.35 99.26 236.53 69.59 211.24 61.8 170.07
60–79.9 122.01 246.89 122.52 227.02 114.45 242.5 159.68 291.76 185.95 387.54 197.3 418.27 229.84 417.51 136.21 313.35 158.71 333.84
80–89.9 242.45 404.26 194.76 370.36 194.74 392.56 270.18 471.22 344.46 594.93 387.21 607.97 401.4 689.52 309.65 610.39 298.4 629.92
90–100 713.99 1818.17 592.71 1565.69 542.04 1669.56 646.54 2218.94 1095.88 2968.97 1141.27 3130.45 1257.64 3712.54 1275.32 3114.95 1134.5 3248.01
Age of head (years)
Less than 35 14.7 90.06 15.09 73.75 18.21 65.7 13.01 95.89 15.36 111.76 17.51 90.83 13.15 119.05 9.97 69.8 10.46 75.43
35–44 102.22 268.48 72.63 216.62 79.08 218.66 90.77 280.69 103.09 341.44 85.64 369.57 99.54 366.66 45.4 232.14 47.05 347.48
45–54 177.32 509.75 127.22 437.02 140.71 456.45 151 519.66 176.39 646.15 178.93 671.14 207.72 743.79 125.55 611.01 105.35 526.04
55–64 177.45 557.02 184.9 551.42 175.33 580.88 182.84 762.66 243.31 967.69 310.75 1044.82 284.85 1051.28 191.51 941.87 165.72 795.39
65–74 140.27 528.08 160.36 468.15 168.42 531.47 209.42 667.27 233.75 888.56 234.54 853.34 268.8 1137.84 221.49 902.95 232.1 1047.31
75 or more 131.14 436.54 141.19 348.1 141.16 394.72 179.83 443.67 205.32 614.83 201.13 648.94 239.38 717.66 232.45 705.43 195 611.43
Family structure
Single with child(ren) 12.65 114.8 13.78 86.21 18.21 110.45 23.02 149.95 17.12 125.04 25.4 161.14 27.77 200.2 16.77 153.45 14.16 129.14
Single, no child, age less than 55 14.91 135.53 24.37 114.93 26.35 110.23 22.16 131.31 25.61 196.09 26.64 192.92 28.18 233.42 15.75 126.72 14.14 148
Single, no child, age 55 or more 73.53 221.71 95.15 254.04 107.39 300.55 124.37 351.49 120.03 383.07 144.52 432.57 161.57 438.18 108.56 408.81 107.9 372.77
Couple with child(ren) 113.16 367.7 97.97 335.85 100.03 329.12 124.44 429.95 149.77 579.85 150.65 622.81 158.2 673.05 92.59 591.65 93.01 587.2
Couple, no child 202.41 644.02 167.97 513.01 175.77 551.23 212.24 689.38 230.8 846.48 257.23 928.84 251.39 1065.75 219.67 921.93 213.73 941.42
Education of head
No high school diploma 43.71 150.4 30.38 113.87 34.91 127.3 30.02 112.77 33.37 138.37 25.4 167.93 37.16 160.44 17.47 118.51 17.25 107.73
High school diploma 66.34 203.53 62.39 181.57 78.52 202.29 77.41 225.49 76.17 237.97 84.35 243.38 90.39 282.7 60.77 231.89 52.4 199.74
Some college 84.34 336.97 93.99 279.95 71.83 287.13 106.59 341.44 95.86 369.1 85.24 380.66 94.99 412.2 54.55 291.68 46.8 318.2
College degree 204.26 671.18 161.37 553.81 158.62 589.66 209.14 759.07 281.49 1050.7 279.45 1052.44 319.55 1233.48 207.37 1039.27 218.72 1015.52
Race or ethnicity of respondent
White non-Hispanic 130.47 418.12 113.25 362.34 116.57 383.13 137.21 484.34 161.39 642.12 173.84 694.21 192.58 777.65 139.05 695.69 141.9 696.51
Nonwhite or Hispanic 11.37 117.06 19.5 126.01 23.53 117.04 23.73 143.6 23.66 154.39 30.64 189.1 31.66 257.55 21.97 188.11 18.1 184.23
Current work status of head
Working for someone else 69.23 207.12 64.26 199.6 75.14 209.04 74.91 241.89 85.88 299.38 83 332.93 105.09 394.83 59.05 319 62.09 314.78
Self-employed 306.38 1201.18 238.84 977.15 236.94 1071.65 355.09 1320.2 459.63 1639.56 428.89 1755.61 436.77 2196.15 304.9 1842.66 359.5 2121.08
Retired 122.32 336.74 114.55 308.21 123.25 342.96 161.96 432.95 151.66 598.88 172.38 578.11 180.99 610.28 161.29 518.84 128.5 501.09
Other not working 1.05 84.2 5.36 86.31 5.53 86.56 5.15 154.2 10.24 234.05 14.37 199.98 6.4 138.74 12.75 144.38 9.06 135.15
Current occupation of head
Managerial or professional 202.05 693.66 165.37 613.03 168.17 660.62 189.84 778.16 260.15 1010.06 243.42 1066.24 277.56 1254.73 178.22 1110.19 192.6 1047.79
Technical, sales, or services 50.49 236.17 59.47 223.19 56.09 242.98 59.04 275.56 60.8 259.47 55.94 305.19 82.95 348.41 34.85 234.04 31.66 267.59
Other occupation 66.81 201.6 53.24 142.14 69.37 171.55 71.19 179.84 65.21 179.04 70.07 182.02 72.7 215.72 49.92 174.08 49.24 172.31
Retired or other not working 79.53 284.09 81.24 255.61 94.5 290.84 117.65 384.46 126.86 539.55 136.51 519.42 144.84 536.67 100.1 438.72 90.8 431.36
Housing status
Owner 181.82 492.75 161.01 439.95 157.63 463.61 188.98 580.49 226.79 736.75 227.76 772.14 263.8 874.29 185.41 758.71 195.5 773.41
Renter or other 3.62 76.29 5.28 62.9 7.32 66.6 6 61.82 6.33 72.39 4.99 66.83 5.73 80.01 5.47 60.79 5.4 70.39
Percentile of net worth
Less than 25 0.2 -0.98 0.81 -0.91 1.44 -0.23 0.71 -2.64 1.58 0.1 2.1 -1.64 1.47 -2.36 -13.01 -12.97
25–49.9 37.96 41.84 38.31 41.38 42.99 46.49 46.95 51.42 53.84 58.39 53.76 58.16 60.87 65.27 34.62 38.19 31.36 35.86
50–74.9 157.8 162.17 142.82 147.45 144.38 151.23 172.63 183.98 207.36 219.86 210.99 229.18 247.68 255.71 168.04 180.14 168.23 177.71
75–89.9 382.57 411.6 332.1 355.92 336.53 362.35 444.48 461.3 566.59 594.04 628.78 652.2 642.46 660.23 514.33 562.65 505.08 546.25
90–100 1249.03 2294.4 1085.34 2035.37 1038.76 2196.97 1287 2779.65 1729.24 3631.65 1762.78 3845.83 2130.17 4462.99 1997.43 3945.86 1871.6 3962.43
† Less than 0.05 ($50).

See also edit

Wealth:

Tax avoidance:

General:

References edit

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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • .
  • Americans Underestimate U.S. Wealth Inequality (audio – NPR).
  • 15 Mind-Blowing Facts About Wealth And Inequality In America (charts – The Business Insider).
  • It's the Inequality, Stupid: 11 Charts that Explain Everything that's Wrong with America (Mother Jones – March 2011).
  • .
  • .
  • Introducing the Distributional Financial Accounts of the United States (Federal Reserve – March 2019)

affluence, united, states, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, accessibility, this, article, question, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, april, 2015,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The accessibility of this article is in question Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page April 2015 This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article September 2015 This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Affluence refers to an individual s or household s economical and financial advantage in comparison to others 1 It may be assessed through either income or wealth Net Wealth of the United States Assets Net Wealth LiabilitiesMedian U S household income per County in 2021 showing the distribution of income geographically in the United StatesIn absolute terms affluence is a relatively widespread phenomenon in the United States with over 30 of households having an income exceeding 100 000 per year and over 30 of households having a net worth exceeding 250 000 as of 2019 2 3 However when looked at in relative terms wealth is highly concentrated the bottom 50 of Americans only share 2 of total household wealth while the top 1 hold 35 of that wealth In the United States as of 2019 the median household income is 60 030 per year and the median household net worth is 97 300 while the mean household income is 89 930 per year and the mean household net worth is 692 100 2 3 Contents 1 Income vs wealth 2 Income as a metric 3 Wealth 3 1 Mechanisms to gain wealth 4 Top percentiles of income 4 1 Household income over time 4 1 1 Income distribution over time 4 2 Complications in interpreting income statistics 4 3 Median income levels 5 Wealth distribution 5 1 Income inequality 6 Changes in wealth 6 1 1989 2001 6 2 After 2007 7 Professions 8 Education 9 Religion 10 Race 11 Status and stratification 12 Extreme affluence 13 Wealth statistics 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksIncome vs wealth editSee also Household income in the United States Annual income and accumulated net worth by age nbsp Annual income of U S families is near its highest throughout the 35 64 age group 4 nbsp Accumulated net worth of U S families peaks in the 65 74 year age group 5 While income is often seen as a type of wealth in colloquial language use wealth and income are two substantially different measures of economic prosperity Wealth is the total value of net possessions of an individual or household while income is the total inflow of monetary assets over a given time period Hence the change in wealth over that time period is equal to the income minus the expenditures in that period Income is a so called flow variable while wealth is a so called stock variable Income as a metric edit nbsp Breakdowns of individuals and households with incomes exceeding 60 000 as of 2005 6 7 nbsp The image contains several charts related to U S wealth inequality While U S net worth roughly doubled from 2000 to 2016 the gains went primarily to the wealthy Affluence in the United States has been attributed in many cases to inherited wealth amounting to a substantial head start 8 9 in September 2012 the Institute for Policy Studies found that over 60 percent of the Forbes richest 400 Americans had grown up with substantial privilege 10 Income is commonly used to measure affluence although this is a relative indicator a middle class person with a personal income of 77 500 annually and a billionaire may both be referred to as affluent depending on reference groups An average American with a median income of 32 000 11 39 000 for those employed full time between the ages of 25 and 64 12 when used as a reference group would justify the personal income in the tenth percentile of 77 500 being described as affluent 11 but if this earner were compared to an executive of a Fortune 500 company then the description would not apply 13 14 Accordingly marketing firms and investment houses classify those with household incomes exceeding 250 000 as mass affluent while the threshold upper class is most commonly defined as the top 1 with household incomes commonly exceeding 525 000 annually According to the U S Census Bureau 42 of U S households have two income earners thus making households income levels higher than personal income levels 15 the percent of married couple families with children where both parents work is 59 1 16 In 2005 the economic survey revealed the following income distribution for households and individuals The top 5 of individuals had six figure incomes exceeding 100 000 the top 10 of individuals had incomes exceeding 75 000 11 The top 5 of households three quarters of whom had two income earners had incomes of 166 200 about 10 times the 2009 US minimum wage for one income earner and about 5 times the 2009 US minimum wage for two income earners or higher 15 with the top 10 having incomes well in excess of 100 000 17 The top 0 12 of households had incomes exceeding 1 600 000 annually 18 Households may also be differentiated among each other depending on whether or not they have one or multiple income earners the high female participation in the economy means that many households have two working members 19 For example in 2005 the median household income for a two income earner households was 67 000 while the median income for an individual employed full time with a graduate degree was in excess of 60 000 demonstrating that nearly half of individuals with a graduate degree have earnings comparable with most dual income households 12 By another measure the number of square feet per person in the home the average home in the United States has more than 700 square feet per person 50 100 more than in other high income countries though this indicator may be regarded as an accident of geography climate and social preference both within the US and beyond it but this metric indicates even those in the lowest income percentiles enjoy more living space than the middle classes in most European nations failed verification Similarly ownership levels of gadgets and access to amenities are exceptionally high compared to many other countries 20 21 Overall the term affluent may be applied to a variety of individuals households or other entities depending on context Data from the U S Census Bureau serves as the main guideline for defining affluence U S government data not only reveal the nation s income distribution but also the demographic characteristics of those to whom the term affluent may be applied 15 Wealth editWealth in the United States is commonly measured in terms of net worth which is the sum of all assets including the market value of real estate like a home minus all liabilities 22 The United States is the wealthiest country in the world 23 nbsp U S Household and non profit Net Worth 1959 2016 nominal and real 2016 dollars It reached a record 93 trillion in Q4 2016 For example a household in possession of an 800 000 house 5 000 in mutual funds 30 000 in cars 20 000 worth of stock in their own company and a 45 000 IRA would have assets totaling 900 000 Assuming that this household would have a 250 000 mortgage 40 000 in car loans and 10 000 in credit card debt its debts would total 300 000 Subtracting the debts from the worth of this household s assets 900 000 300 000 600 000 this household would have a net worth of 600 000 Net worth can vary with fluctuations in value of the underlying assets As one would expect households with greater income often have the highest net worths though high income cannot be taken as an always accurate indicator of net worth Overall the number of wealthier households is on the rise with baby boomers hitting the highs of their careers 22 In addition wealth is unevenly distributed with the wealthiest 25 of US households owning 87 24 of the wealth in the United States which was 54 2 trillion in 2009 25 26 U S household and non profit organization net worth rose from 44 2 trillion in Q1 2000 to a pre recession peak of 67 7 trillion in Q3 2007 It then fell 13 1 trillion to 54 6 trillion in Q1 2009 due to the subprime mortgage crisis It then recovered rising consistently to 86 8 trillion by Q4 2015 This is nearly double the 2000 level 27 Mechanisms to gain wealth edit Assets are known as the raw materials of wealth and they consist primarily of stocks and other financial and non financial property particularly homeownership 28 While tangible assets are unequally distributed financial assets are much more unequal In 2004 the top 1 controlled 50 3 of the financial assets while the bottom 90 held only 14 4 of the total US financial assets 28 These discrepancies exist because the many wealth building tools established by the Federal Government work better for high earners These include 401k plans 403b plans and IRAs Traditional IRAs 401k and 403b plans are tax shelters created for working individuals These plans allow for tax sheltered or pre tax contributions of earned income directly to tax sheltered savings accounts Annual contributions are capped to ensure that high earners cannot enjoy the tax benefit disproportionately The Roth IRA is another tool that can help create wealth in the working and middle classes Assets in Roth IRAs grow tax free interests dividends and capital gains are all exempt from income taxes Contributions to Roth IRAs are limited to those with annual incomes less than the threshold established yearly by the IRS The benefits of these plans however are only available to workers and families whose incomes and expenses allow them excess funds to commit for a long period typically until the investor reaches age 59 The effect of these tools are further limited by the contribution limits placed on them Including human capital such as skills the United Nations International Human Dimensions Programme estimated the total wealth of the United States in 2008 to be 118 trillion 29 30 Top percentiles of income editThis section s factual accuracy may be compromised due to out of date information Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information May 2013 Affluence and economic standing within society are often expressed in terms of percentile ranking The economic ranking is conducted either in terms of giving lower thresholds for a designated group e g the top 5 10 15 etc or in terms of the percentage of households individuals with incomes above a certain threshold e g above 75 000 100 000 150 000 etc The table below presents 2006 income data in terms of the lower thresholds for the given percentages e g the top 25 6 of households had incomes exceeding 80 000 compared to 47 000 for the top quarter of individuals 11 17 Data Top third Top quarter Top quintile Top 15 Top 10 Top 5 Top 3 Top 1 5 Top 0 1 18 Household income 17 Lower threshold annual gross income 65 000 80 000 91 202 100 000 118 200 166 200 200 000 250 000 1 600 000Exact percentage of households 34 72 25 60 20 00 17 80 10 00 5 00 2 67 1 50 0 12 Personal income age 25 11 Lower threshold annual gross income 37 500 47 500 52 500 62 500 75 000 100 000 N AExact percentage of individuals 33 55 24 03 19 74 14 47 10 29 5 63 N ASource U S Census Bureau 2006 11 17 Household income over time edit Further information Income in the United States Household income changes over time with income gains being substantially larger for the upper percentiles than for the lower percentiles 31 All areas of the income strata have seen their incomes rise since the late 1960s especially during the late 1990s 32 The overall increase in household income is not the result of an increase in the percentage of households with more than one income earner In fact the lowest 50 population have become very poor citation needed sharing just 2 of wealth in spite of modern social practice of more than one working person mostly women in the household But the myth is highly prevalent and promoted by media The standard of living of a 1960s single working parent can only be afforded today when both parents work due to disproportionate distribution of wealth today 19 In about 2003 Elizabeth Warren said that the typical middle class household in the United States is no longer a one earner family with one parent in the workforce and one at home full time Instead the majority of families with small children now have both parents rising at dawn to commute to jobs so they can both pull in paychecks Today the median income for a fully employed male is nearly 800 less than his counterpart of a generation ago The only real increase in wages for a family has come from the second paycheck earned by a working mother 19 Two income earner households are more common among the top quintile of households than the general population 2006 U S Census Bureau data indicates that over three quarters 76 of households in the top quintile with annual incomes exceeding 91 200 had two or more income earners compared to just 42 among the general population and a small minority in the bottom three quintiles As a result much of the rising income inequity between the upper and lower percentiles can be explained through the increasing percentage of households with two or more incomes 19 31 Data 2003 2000 1997 1994 1991 1988 1985 1982 1979 1976 1973 1970 196720th percentile 17 984 19 142 17 601 16 484 16 580 17 006 16 306 15 548 16 457 15 615 15 844 15 126 14 002Median 50th 43 318 44 853 42 294 39 613 39 679 40 678 38 510 36 811 38 649 36 155 37 700 35 832 33 33880th percentile 86 867 87 341 81 719 77 154 74 759 75 593 71 433 66 920 68 318 63 247 64 500 60 148 55 26595th percentile 154 120 155 121 144 636 134 835 126 969 127 958 119 459 111 516 111 445 100 839 102 243 95 090 88 678Source U S Census Bureau 2004 Income Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States 2003 p 36 et seq All figures are inflation adjusted and given in 2003 dollars 32 Income distribution over time edit nbsp Relative income growth organized by percentile classes normalized to 1970 levels Graph accounts for both income growth and the hidden decline in the progressivity of the tax code at the top the wealthiest earners having seen their effective tax rates steadily fall 33 nbsp Same data 33 as adjacent chart but plotted on logarithmic scale to show absolute dollar amounts According to the Congressional Budget Office between 1979 and 2007 incomes of the top 1 of Americans grew by an average of 275 During the same time period the 60 of Americans in the middle of the income scale saw their income rise by 40 From 1992 to 2007 the top 400 income earners in the U S saw their income increase 392 and their average tax rate reduced by 37 34 In 2009 the average income of the top 1 was 960 000 with a minimum income of 343 927 35 36 37 During the economic expansion between 2002 and 2007 the income of the top 1 grew 10 times faster than the income of the bottom 90 In this period 66 of total income gains went to the 1 who in 2007 had a larger share of total income than at any time since 1928 36 According to PolitiFact and others the top 400 wealthiest Americans have more wealth than half of all Americans combined 38 39 40 41 Inherited wealth may help explain why many Americans who have become rich may have had a substantial head start 8 9 In September 2012 according to the Institute for Policy Studies over 60 percent of the Forbes richest 400 Americans grew up in substantial privilege 10 If a family has a positive net worth then it has more wealth than the combined net worth of over 30 6 million American families This is because the bottom 25 of American families have a negative combined net worth 42 Complications in interpreting income statistics edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Interpreting these income statistics is complicated by several factors membership in the top 1 changes from year to year the IRS made large changes in the definition of adjusted gross income in 1987 and numbers for particular income ranges may be distorted by outliers in the top segment and failure to include transfer payments in the lower segments Regarding Income Mobility the IRS occasionally studies income data from actual households over time usually over one decade Their results underestimate income mobility by excluding those under age 25 the most mobile population from their studies Many people 43 44 45 who look only at annual reported income data split into income quintiles It is erroneous to assume that individual households remain in the same quintile over time just as it usually is when using aggregate data A majority of households in the top income quintile in one year for example will have moved to a lower quintile within a decade Three out of four households in the top 0 01 of income will no longer be in that small group ten years later In summary half of all of U S households move from one income quintile to a different income quintile every decade And actual households who started a decade in the lowest quintile of income when tracked over the next ten years will have proportionally more income growth than actual households who started the decade in the highest quintile of income Thus when comparing income wealth quintile distributions from different time periods generalizations can only be made with regards to the households in aggregate for each quintile and can not be made to any individual households over the same time period i e assuming the wealth value has been appropriately adjusted for differences in time one cannot infer that a decrease in total wealth percentage for one quintile over time means that the households from that quintile have lost wealth as individuals but only that total wealth percentage has decreased for those in that quintile at the time of measurement Top 20 income vs the bottom 20 income households The average number of people with jobs in a top income quintile household is two while a majority of bottom income quintile households have no one employed If there are two adult income earners in a household who are married their incomes are combined on tax forms This is very common among top quintile income households The lowest quintile households however include a lot more single person households or two unmarried working adults living together and sharing expenses but reporting their incomes to the IRS as if they were two separate households 75 80 clarification needed of actual income for bottom quintile households consists of specific transfer payments from social or relief programs aka welfare and other benefits which payments are not included in IRS data as income The top income quintile gets a very small percentage of their actual income from transfer payments The IRS warns against comparisons of pre 1987 and post 1987 income data due to significant changes in the definition of adjusted gross income AGI that made top quintile households appear to have large reported income gains when in fact there was no change to their income at all In addition to AGI changes large marginal tax rate reductions during the Reagan Administration caused another large change in tax reporting A lot of corporate income formerly reported on corporate tax returns was switched to lower tax rate individual tax returns as Subchapter S corporations This reporting change appeared to boost top quintile income when in fact their incomes had not changed As a result the top income quintile for households today includes a lot of corporate income previously reported in corporate tax returns while Subchapter S corporations that lose money are likely to be included in the bottom income quintile households Income comparisons that compare pre 1987 to post 1987 income are very common but they are also biased according to the IRS and should be ignored 46 Impact of age and experience people that are older and have more experience tend to have considerably larger incomes than younger and inexperienced workers Normalizing for age and experience is rarely an effective statistical compensation as each elderly citizen began as inexperienced Median income levels edit Further information Personal income in the United States and Household income in the United States Median household income by selected characteristics 47 Type of household Race and Hispanic origin RegionAll households Familyhouseholds Nonfamilyhouseholds Asian Non Hispanic White Hispanic of any race Black Northeast Midwest South West 70 784 91 162 41 797 101 418 77 999 57 981 48 297 77 422 71 129 63 368 79 430Median household income by selected characteristics cont Age of Householder Nativity of Householder Metropolitan Statistical Area MSA Status Educational Attainment of Householder Under 65 years 65 years and older Native born Foreign born Inside MSA Outside MSA No high school diploma High school no college Some college Bachelor s degree or higher 80 734 47 620 71 522 66 043 73 823 53 750 30 378 50 401 64 378 115 456 Householders aged 25 and older In 2021 the median household income for this group was 72 046 Median earnings by work status and sex Persons aged 15 years and older with earnings Total workers Full Time year round workersBoth sexes Male Female Both sexes Male Female 45 470 50 983 39 201 56 473 61 180 51 2262020 Median earnings amp household income by educational attainment 48 49 Measure Overall Less than 9th grade Some High School High school graduate Some college Associate s degree Bachelor s degree or higher Bachelor s degree Master s degree Professional degree Doctorate degreePersons age 25 w earnings 46 985 25 162 26 092 34 540 39 362 42 391 66 423 60 705 71 851 102 741 101 526Male age 25 w earnings 52 298 30 089 31 097 40 852 47 706 52 450 80 192 71 666 91 141 126 584 121 956Female age 25 w earnings 40 392 18 588 19 504 27 320 31 837 36 298 57 355 51 154 62 522 92 780 85 551Persons age 25 employed full time 59 371 33 945 34 897 42 417 50 640 52 285 77 105 71 283 82 183 130 466 119 552Household 69 228 29 609 29 520 47 405 60 392 68 769 106 936 100 128 114 900 151 560 142 493 Total work experienceHousehold income distribution 10th percentile 20th percentile 30th percentile 40th percentile 50th percentile 60th percentile 70th percentile 80th percentile 90th percentile 95th percentile 15 700 28 000 40 500 55 000 70 800 89 700 113 200 149 100 212 100 286 300Source US Census Bureau 2021 income statistics for the year 2021Wealth distribution editNet personal wealth in the U S since 1962 nbsp The average personal wealth of people in the top 1 is more than a thousand times that of people in bottom 50 50 nbsp The logarithmic scale shows how wealth has increased for all percentile groups though moreso for wealthier people 50 According to an analysis that excludes pensions and social security the richest 1 of the American population in 2007 owned 34 6 of the country s total wealth and the next 19 owned 50 5 Thus the top 20 of Americans owned 85 of the country s wealth and the bottom 80 of the population owned 15 Financial inequality was greater than inequality in total wealth with the top 1 of the population owning 42 7 the next 19 of Americans owning 50 3 and the bottom 80 owning 7 51 However according to the federal reserve For most households pensions and Social Security are the most important sources of income during retirement and the promised benefit stream constitutes a sizable fraction of household wealth and including pensions and Social Security in net worth makes the distribution more even 52 When including household wealth from pensions and social security the richest 1 of the American population in 1992 owned 16 of the country s total wealth as opposed to 32 when excluding pensions and social security After the Great Recession which started in 2007 the share of total wealth owned by the top 1 of the population grew from 34 6 to 37 1 and that owned by the top 20 of Americans grew from 85 to 87 7 The Great Recession also caused a drop of 36 1 in median household wealth but a drop of only 11 1 for the top 1 53 51 Income inequality edit Main article Income inequality in the United States Economists and related experts have described America s growing income inequality as deeply worrying 54 unjust 55 a danger to democracy social stability 56 57 58 and a sign of national decline 59 Yale professor Robert Shiller who was among three Americans who won the Nobel prize for economics in 2013 said after receiving the award The most important problem that we are facing now today I think is rising inequality in the United States and elsewhere in the world 60 Changes in wealth edit1989 2001 edit When observing the changes in the wealth among American households one can note an increase in wealthier individuals and a decrease in the number of poor households while net worth increased most substantially in semi wealthy and wealthy households Overall the percentage of households with a negative net worth more debt than assets declined from 9 5 in 1989 to 4 1 in 2001 22 The percentage of net worths ranging from 500 000 to one million doubled while the percentage of millionaires tripled 22 From 1995 to 2004 there was tremendous growth among household wealth as it nearly doubled from 21 9 trillion to 43 6 trillion but the wealthiest quartile of the economic distribution made up 89 of this growth 25 During this time frame wealth became increasingly unequal and the wealthiest 25 became even wealthier According to U S Census Bureau statistics this upward shift is most likely the result of a booming housing market which caused homeowners to experience tremendous increases in home equity Life cycles have also attributed to the rising wealth among Americans With more and more baby boomers reaching the climax of their careers and the middle aged population making up a larger segment of the population now than ever before more and more households have achieved comfortable levels of wealth 22 Zhu Xiao Di 2004 notes that household wealth usually peaks around families headed by people in their 50s and as a result the baby boomer generation reached this age range at the time of the analysis 25 After 2007 edit Household net worth fell from 2007 to 2009 by a total of 17 5 trillion or 25 5 This was the equivalent loss of one year of GDP 61 By the fourth quarter of 2010 the household net worth had recovered by a growth of 1 3 percent to a total of 56 8 trillion An additional growth of 15 7 percent is needed just to bring the value to where it was before the recession started in December 2007 24 In 2014 a record breaking net worth of 80 7 trillion was achieved 62 Professions editFurther information High net worth individual According to the University of Chicago the top 1 is primarily made up of owner managers of small to medium sized businesses of which the most profitable are physician s and dentist s offices professional and technical services specialty trade contracting legal services The typical business has 7 million in sales and 57 employees With a 10 profit margin this will place two business partners in the top 1 The remainder of the top 1 tends to be the classic professions medicine dentistry law engineering finance and corporate executive management A correlation has been shown between increases in income and increases in worker satisfaction Increasing worker satisfaction however is not solely a result of the increase in income workers in more complex and higher level occupations tend to have attained higher levels of education and thus are more likely to have a greater degree of autonomy in the workplace 63 Additionally higher level workers with advanced degrees are hired to share their personal knowledge to conceptualize and to consult Higher level workers typically suffer less job alienation and reap not only external benefits in terms of income from their jobs but also enjoy high levels of intrinsic motivation and satisfaction 14 63 In the United States the highest earning occupational group is referred to as white collar professionals Individuals in this occupational classification tend to report the highest job satisfaction and highest incomes Defining income based on title of a profession can be misleading given that a professional title may indicate the type of education received but does not always correlate with the actual day to day income generating endeavors that are pursued Some sources cite the profession of physician in the United States as the highest paying 14 Physician MD and DO and Dentist DMD and DDS compensation ranks as the highest median annual earnings of all professions Median annual earnings ranged from 149 310 for general dentists and 156 010 for family physicians to 321 686 for anesthesiologists Surgeons post a median annual income of 282 504 64 However the annual salary for Chief Executive Officer C E O is projected quite differently based on source Salary com reports a median salary of 634 941 65 while the U S Department of Labor in May 2004 reported the median as 140 350 66 This is primarily due to a methodological difference in terms of which companies were surveyed Overall annual earnings among the nation s top 25 professions ranged from the 70 000s to the 300 000s In addition to physicians lawyers physicists and nuclear engineers were all among the nation s 20 highest paid occupations with incomes in excess of 78 410 67 Some of the other occupations in the high five figure range were economists with a median of 72 780 68 mathematicians with 81 240 69 financial managers with 81 880 70 and software publishers with median annual earnings of 73 060 71 The median annual earnings of wage and salary pharmacists in May 2006 were 94 520 The median annual earnings of wage and salary engineers in November 2011 were 90 000 The middle 50 percent earned between 83 180 and 108 140 a year as in the Occupational Outlook Handbook 2008 09 Edition by the U S Bureau of Labor Statistics Education editFurther information Educational attainment in the United States nbsp Median household and personal income by educational attainment nbsp Ivy Plus admissions rates vary with the income of the students parents with the acceptance rate of the top 0 1 income percentile being almost twice as much as other students 72 Educational attainment plays a major factor in determining an individual s economic disposition Personal income varied greatly according to an individual s education as did household income Incomes for those employed full time year round and over the age of twenty five ranged from 20 826 17 422 if including those who worked part time 11 for those with less than a ninth grade education to 100 000 for those with professional degrees 82 473 if including those who work part time 11 The median income for individuals with doctorates was 79 401 70 853 if including those who work part time 11 73 These statistics reveal that the majority of those employed full time with professional or doctoral degrees are among the overall top 10 15 if including those who work part time of income earners Of those with a master s degree nearly 50 were among the top quarter of income earners top third if including those who work part time 11 Religion editIndividuals of a broad variety of religious backgrounds have become wealthy in America However the majority of these individuals follow Mainline Protestant denominations Episcopalians 74 and Presbyterians are most prevalent 75 According to a 2016 study by the Pew Research Center Jewish again ranked as the most financially successful religious group in the United States with 44 of Jews living in households with incomes of at least 100 000 followed by Hindu 36 Episcopalians 35 and Presbyterians 32 76 Owing to their numbers more Catholics 13 3 million reside in households with a yearly income of 100 000 or more than any other religious group 76 According to the same study there is a correlation between education and income about 77 of American Hindus have an undergraduate degree and according to a study in 2020 they are earning the highest with median income 137 000 followed by Jews 59 Episcopalians 56 and Presbyterians 47 77 Race editSee also Racial inequality in the United States Home ownership nbsp Percent of households with six figure incomes and individuals with incomes in the top 10 exceeding 77 500Recent U S Census Bureau publications indicate a strong correlation between race and affluence In the top household income quintile households with incomes exceeding 91 200 Asian Americans and Whites were over represented whereas Hispanics and African Americans were underrepresented In 2006 the household income for Asian Americans was at 61 094 by far the highest 78 exceeding that of Whites 48 554 by 26 79 Over a quarter 27 5 of Asian American households had incomes exceeding 100 000 and another 40 had incomes of over 75 000 80 Among White households who remained near the national median 18 3 had six figure incomes while 28 9 had incomes exceeding 75 000 79 The percentages of households with incomes exceeding 100 000 and 75 000 were far below the national medians for Hispanic and African American households 81 Among Hispanic households for example only 9 had six figure incomes and 17 had incomes exceeding 75 000 82 The race gap remained when considering personal income In 2005 roughly 11 of Asian Americans 83 and 7 of White individuals 84 had six figure incomes compared to 2 6 among Hispanics 85 and 2 3 among African Americans 86 The racial breakdowns of income brackets further illustrate the racial disparities associated with affluence in 2005 81 8 of all 114 million households were White including White Hispanics 79 12 2 were African American 81 10 9 were Hispanic 82 and 3 7 were Asian American 78 87 While White households are always near the national median due to Whites being by far the most prevalent racial demographic the percentages of minority households with incomes exceeding 100 000 strayed considerably from their percentage of the overall population Asian Americans who represent the smallest surveyed racial demographic in the overall population were found to be the prevalent minority among six figure income households Among the nearly twenty million households with six figure incomes 86 9 were White 79 5 9 were Asian American 78 5 6 were Hispanic 82 and 5 5 were African American 81 Among the general individual population with earnings 82 1 were White 84 12 7 were Hispanic 85 11 0 were African American 86 and 4 6 were Asian American 83 Of the top 10 of income earners those nearly 15 million individuals with incomes exceeding 77 500 Whites and Asians were once again over represented with the percentages of African Americans and Hispanics trailing behind considerably Of the top 10 of earners 86 7 were White 84 Asian Americans were the prevalent minority constituting 6 8 of top 10 income earners nearly twice the percentage of Asian Americans among the general population 83 Hispanics who were the prevalent minority in the general population of income earners constituted only 5 2 of those in the top 10 85 with African Americans being the least represented with 5 1 86 Race Overall median High school Some college College graduate Bachelor s degree Master s degree Doctoral degreeTotal population All age 25 32 140 26 505 31 054 49 303 43 143 52 390 70 853Full time workers age 25 64 39 509 31 610 37 150 56 027 50 959 61 324 79 292White alone All age 25 33 030 27 311 31 564 49 972 43 833 52 318 71 268Full time workers age 25 64 40 422 32 427 38 481 56 903 51 543 61 441 77 906Asian alone All age 25 36 152 25 285 29 982 51 481 42 466 61 452 69 653Full time workers age 25 64 42 109 27 041 33 120 60 532 51 040 71 316 91 430African American All age 25 27 101 22 379 27 648 44 534 41 572 48 266 61 894Full time workers age 25 64 32 021 26 230 32 392 47 758 45 505 52 858 N AHispanic or Latino All age 25 23 613 22 941 28 698 41 596 37 819 50 901 67 274Full time workers age 25 64 27 266 26 461 33 120 46 594 41 831 53 880 N ASource U S Census Bureau 2006 88 Status and stratification editEconomic well being is often associated with high societal status yet income and economic compensation are a function of scarcity and act as only one of a number of indicators of social class It is in the interest of all of society that open positions are adequately filled with a competent occupant enticed to do his or her best 14 As a result an occupation that requires a scarce skill the attainment of which is often documented through an educational degree and entrusts its occupant with a high degree of influence will generally offer high economic compensation To put it another way the high income is intended to ensure that the desired individuals obtain the necessary skills e g medical or graduate school and complete their tasks with the necessary vigor 89 but differences in income may however be found among occupations of similar sociological nature the median annual earnings of a physician were in excess of 150 000 in May 2004 compared to 95 000 for an attorney 64 67 Both occupations require finely tuned and scarce skill sets and both are essential to the well being of society yet physicians out earned attorneys and other upper middle class professionals by a wide margin as their skill sets are deemed especially scarce Overall high status positions tend to be those requiring a scarce skill and are therefore commonly far better compensated than those in the middle of the occupational strata 14 89 It is essential that the duties of the positions be performed with the diligence that their importance requires Inevitably then a society must have first some kind of rewards that it can use as inducements and second some way of distributing these rewards differently according to positions The rewards and their distribution become part of the social order If the rights and perquisites of different positions in a society must be unequal then society must be stratified Hence every society must differentiate persons and must therefore possess a certain amount of institutionalized inequality Kingsley Davis amp Wilbert E Moore Some Principles of Stratification republished in Social Class and Stratification 89 It is important to note that the above is an ideal type a simplified model of reality using optimal circumstances In reality other factors such as discrimination based on race ethnicity and gender as well as aggressive political lobbying by certain professional organizations also influence personal income An individual s personal career decisions as well as his or her personal connections within the nation s economic institutions are also likely to have an effect on income status and whether or not an individual may be referred to as affluent 13 In contemporary America it is a combination of all these factors with scarcity remaining by far the most prominent one which determine a person s economic compensation Due to higher status professions requiring advanced and thus less commonly found skill sets including the ability to supervise and work with a considerable autonomy these professions are better compensated through the means of income making high status individuals affluent depending on reference group 14 While the two paragraphs above only describe the relationship between status and personal income household income is also often used to infer status As a result the dual income phenomenon presents yet another problem in equating affluence with high societal status As mentioned earlier in the article 42 of households have two or more income earners and 76 of households with six figure incomes have two or more income earners 15 Furthermore people are most likely to marry their professional and societal equals It therefore becomes apparent that the majority of households with incomes exceeding the six figure mark are the result of an economic as well as personal union between two economic equals Today two nurses each making 55 000 a year can easily out earn a single attorney who makes the median of 95 000 annually 67 90 Despite household income rising drastically through the union of two economic equals neither individual has advanced his or her function and position within society Yet the household not the individual may have become more affluent assuming an increase in household members does not offset the dual income derived gains Academic class models Dennis Gilbert 2002 William Thompson amp Joseph Hickey 2005 Leonard Beeghley 2004Class Typical characteristics Class Typical characteristics Class Typical characteristicsCapitalist class 1 Top level executives high rung politicians heirs Ivy League education common Upper class 1 Top level executives celebrities heirs income of 500 000 common Ivy league education common The super rich 0 9 Multi millionaires whose incomes commonly exceed 3 5 million or more includes celebrities and powerful executives politicians Ivy League education common Upper middle class 1 15 Highly educated often with graduate degrees most commonly salaried professionals and middle management with large work autonomy Upper middle class 1 15 Highly educated often with graduate degrees professionals amp managers with household incomes varying from the high 5 figure range to commonly above 100 000 The rich 5 Households with net worth of 1 million or more largely in the form of home equity Generally have college degrees Middle class plurality majority ca 46 College educated workers with considerably higher than average incomes and compensation a man making 57 000 and a woman making 40 000 may be typical Lower middle class 30 Semi professionals and craftsmen with a roughly average standard of living Most have some college education and are white collar Lower middle class 32 Semi professionals and craftsmen with some work autonomy household incomes commonly range from 35 000 to 75 000 Typically some college education Working class 30 Clerical and most blue collar workers whose work is highly routinized Standard of living varies depending on number of income earners but is commonly just adequate High school education Working class 32 Clerical pink and blue collar workers with often low job security common household incomes range from 16 000 to 30 000 High school education Working class ca 40 45 Blue collar workers and those whose jobs are highly routinized with low economic security a man making 40 000 and a woman making 26 000 may be typical High school education Working poor 13 Service low rung clerical and some blue collar workers High economic insecurity and risk of poverty Some high school education Lower class ca 14 20 Those who occupy poorly paid positions or rely on government transfers Some high school education Underclass 12 Those with limited or no participation in the labor force Reliant on government transfers Some high school education The poor ca 12 Those living below the poverty line with limited to no participation in the labor force a household income of 18 000 may be typical Some high school education References Gilbert D 2002 The American Class Structure In An Age of Growing Inequality Belmont CA Wadsworth ISBN 0534541100 see also Gilbert Model Thompson W amp Hickey J 2005 Society in Focus Boston MA Pearson Allyn amp Bacon Beeghley L 2004 The Structure of Social Stratification in the United States Boston MA Pearson Allyn amp Bacon 1 The upper middle class may also be referred to as Professional class Ehrenreich B 1989 The Inner Life of the Middle Class NY NY Harper Collins Extreme affluence edit nbsp The wide income discrepancies within the top 1 5 of householdsSee also Category American billionaires Poverty in the United States and Wealth gap As of 2002 there were approximately 146 000 0 1 households with incomes exceeding 1 500 000 while the top 0 01 or 11 000 households had incomes exceeding 5 500 000 The 400 highest tax payers in the nation had gross annual household incomes exceeding 87 000 000 Household incomes for this group have risen more dramatically than for any other As a result the gap between those who make less than one and half million dollars annually 99 9 of households and those who make more 0 1 has been steadily increasing prompting The New York Times to proclaim that the Richest Are Leaving Even the Rich Far Behind 91 The income disparities within the top 1 5 are quite drastic 92 While households in the top 1 5 of households had incomes exceeding 250 000 443 above the national median their incomes were still 2200 lower than those of the top 0 1 of households Wealth statistics editFamily net worth nbsp U S mean family net worth by percentile of net worth 1989 2007 nbsp U S median family net worth by percentile of net worth 1989 2007 The total value of all U S household wealth in 2000 was approximately 44 trillion Prior to the Late 2000s recession which began in December 2007 its value was at 65 9 trillion After it plunged to 48 5 trillion during the first quarter of 2009 The total household net worth rose 1 3 by the fourth quarter of 2009 to 54 2 trillion indicating the American economy is recovering Family net worth by selected characteristics of families 1989 2013 surveys 93 Thousands of 2013 dollars Excluding net worth from pensions and social security Family characteristic 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median Mean Median MeanAll families 85 06 342 3 80 75 303 94 87 73 323 49 102 5 405 47 113 91 522 08 114 81 553 87 135 86 625 17 82 52 530 4 81 4 528 42Percentile of incomeLess than 20 3 47 44 64 6 4 54 14 9 05 67 76 8 25 70 85 10 37 70 9 15 88 24 9 87 118 86 6 49 125 24 6 2 87 5320 39 9 44 83 123 03 45 09 105 32 52 67 121 87 49 46 139 66 50 61 155 16 42 38 151 95 42 44 151 29 69 139 27 21 5 111 3540 59 9 76 13 185 52 64 26 164 79 69 52 154 09 76 26 179 75 83 7 214 46 89 34 241 35 99 26 236 53 69 59 211 24 61 8 170 0760 79 9 122 01 246 89 122 52 227 02 114 45 242 5 159 68 291 76 185 95 387 54 197 3 418 27 229 84 417 51 136 21 313 35 158 71 333 8480 89 9 242 45 404 26 194 76 370 36 194 74 392 56 270 18 471 22 344 46 594 93 387 21 607 97 401 4 689 52 309 65 610 39 298 4 629 9290 100 713 99 1818 17 592 71 1565 69 542 04 1669 56 646 54 2218 94 1095 88 2968 97 1141 27 3130 45 1257 64 3712 54 1275 32 3114 95 1134 5 3248 01Age of head years Less than 35 14 7 90 06 15 09 73 75 18 21 65 7 13 01 95 89 15 36 111 76 17 51 90 83 13 15 119 05 9 97 69 8 10 46 75 4335 44 102 22 268 48 72 63 216 62 79 08 218 66 90 77 280 69 103 09 341 44 85 64 369 57 99 54 366 66 45 4 232 14 47 05 347 4845 54 177 32 509 75 127 22 437 02 140 71 456 45 151 519 66 176 39 646 15 178 93 671 14 207 72 743 79 125 55 611 01 105 35 526 0455 64 177 45 557 02 184 9 551 42 175 33 580 88 182 84 762 66 243 31 967 69 310 75 1044 82 284 85 1051 28 191 51 941 87 165 72 795 3965 74 140 27 528 08 160 36 468 15 168 42 531 47 209 42 667 27 233 75 888 56 234 54 853 34 268 8 1137 84 221 49 902 95 232 1 1047 3175 or more 131 14 436 54 141 19 348 1 141 16 394 72 179 83 443 67 205 32 614 83 201 13 648 94 239 38 717 66 232 45 705 43 195 611 43Family structureSingle with child ren 12 65 114 8 13 78 86 21 18 21 110 45 23 02 149 95 17 12 125 04 25 4 161 14 27 77 200 2 16 77 153 45 14 16 129 14Single no child age less than 55 14 91 135 53 24 37 114 93 26 35 110 23 22 16 131 31 25 61 196 09 26 64 192 92 28 18 233 42 15 75 126 72 14 14 148Single no child age 55 or more 73 53 221 71 95 15 254 04 107 39 300 55 124 37 351 49 120 03 383 07 144 52 432 57 161 57 438 18 108 56 408 81 107 9 372 77Couple with child ren 113 16 367 7 97 97 335 85 100 03 329 12 124 44 429 95 149 77 579 85 150 65 622 81 158 2 673 05 92 59 591 65 93 01 587 2Couple no child 202 41 644 02 167 97 513 01 175 77 551 23 212 24 689 38 230 8 846 48 257 23 928 84 251 39 1065 75 219 67 921 93 213 73 941 42Education of headNo high school diploma 43 71 150 4 30 38 113 87 34 91 127 3 30 02 112 77 33 37 138 37 25 4 167 93 37 16 160 44 17 47 118 51 17 25 107 73High school diploma 66 34 203 53 62 39 181 57 78 52 202 29 77 41 225 49 76 17 237 97 84 35 243 38 90 39 282 7 60 77 231 89 52 4 199 74Some college 84 34 336 97 93 99 279 95 71 83 287 13 106 59 341 44 95 86 369 1 85 24 380 66 94 99 412 2 54 55 291 68 46 8 318 2College degree 204 26 671 18 161 37 553 81 158 62 589 66 209 14 759 07 281 49 1050 7 279 45 1052 44 319 55 1233 48 207 37 1039 27 218 72 1015 52Race or ethnicity of respondentWhite non Hispanic 130 47 418 12 113 25 362 34 116 57 383 13 137 21 484 34 161 39 642 12 173 84 694 21 192 58 777 65 139 05 695 69 141 9 696 51Nonwhite or Hispanic 11 37 117 06 19 5 126 01 23 53 117 04 23 73 143 6 23 66 154 39 30 64 189 1 31 66 257 55 21 97 188 11 18 1 184 23Current work status of headWorking for someone else 69 23 207 12 64 26 199 6 75 14 209 04 74 91 241 89 85 88 299 38 83 332 93 105 09 394 83 59 05 319 62 09 314 78Self employed 306 38 1201 18 238 84 977 15 236 94 1071 65 355 09 1320 2 459 63 1639 56 428 89 1755 61 436 77 2196 15 304 9 1842 66 359 5 2121 08Retired 122 32 336 74 114 55 308 21 123 25 342 96 161 96 432 95 151 66 598 88 172 38 578 11 180 99 610 28 161 29 518 84 128 5 501 09Other not working 1 05 84 2 5 36 86 31 5 53 86 56 5 15 154 2 10 24 234 05 14 37 199 98 6 4 138 74 12 75 144 38 9 06 135 15Current occupation of headManagerial or professional 202 05 693 66 165 37 613 03 168 17 660 62 189 84 778 16 260 15 1010 06 243 42 1066 24 277 56 1254 73 178 22 1110 19 192 6 1047 79Technical sales or services 50 49 236 17 59 47 223 19 56 09 242 98 59 04 275 56 60 8 259 47 55 94 305 19 82 95 348 41 34 85 234 04 31 66 267 59Other occupation 66 81 201 6 53 24 142 14 69 37 171 55 71 19 179 84 65 21 179 04 70 07 182 02 72 7 215 72 49 92 174 08 49 24 172 31Retired or other not working 79 53 284 09 81 24 255 61 94 5 290 84 117 65 384 46 126 86 539 55 136 51 519 42 144 84 536 67 100 1 438 72 90 8 431 36Housing statusOwner 181 82 492 75 161 01 439 95 157 63 463 61 188 98 580 49 226 79 736 75 227 76 772 14 263 8 874 29 185 41 758 71 195 5 773 41Renter or other 3 62 76 29 5 28 62 9 7 32 66 6 6 61 82 6 33 72 39 4 99 66 83 5 73 80 01 5 47 60 79 5 4 70 39Percentile of net worthLess than 25 0 2 0 98 0 81 0 91 1 44 0 23 0 71 2 64 1 58 0 1 2 1 1 64 1 47 2 36 13 01 12 9725 49 9 37 96 41 84 38 31 41 38 42 99 46 49 46 95 51 42 53 84 58 39 53 76 58 16 60 87 65 27 34 62 38 19 31 36 35 8650 74 9 157 8 162 17 142 82 147 45 144 38 151 23 172 63 183 98 207 36 219 86 210 99 229 18 247 68 255 71 168 04 180 14 168 23 177 7175 89 9 382 57 411 6 332 1 355 92 336 53 362 35 444 48 461 3 566 59 594 04 628 78 652 2 642 46 660 23 514 33 562 65 505 08 546 2590 100 1249 03 2294 4 1085 34 2035 37 1038 76 2196 97 1287 2779 65 1729 24 3631 65 1762 78 3845 83 2130 17 4462 99 1997 43 3945 86 1871 6 3962 43 Less than 0 05 50 See also editPoverty in the United States Social programs in the United States Wealth inequality in the United States Redistribution of wealth Public opinion States of the United States of America by incomeWealth Donor Class Irrational exuberance The Affluent Society AffluenzaTax avoidance Panama Papers Paradise PapersGeneral Economy of the United States Household income in the United States International Ranking of Household Income List of Average Wages per Country List of countries by total wealth List of U S states by savings rateReferences edit Procter Paul ed 1995 Cambridge International Dictionary of English Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 48236 4 a b Household Income Percentile Calculator US 2019 DQYDJ October 8 2019 Retrieved November 16 2019 a b Net Worth Percentile Calculator United States and Average DQYDJ October 2 2017 Retrieved November 16 2019 Changes in U S Family Finances from 2019 to 2022 PDF Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System US October 2023 p 6 Table 1 Archived PDF from the original on December 25 2023 Changes in U S Family Finances from 2019 to 2022 PDF Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System US October 2023 p 12 Table 2 Archived PDF from the original on December 25 2023 US Census Bureau personal income distribution 2005 Archived from the original on December 14 2006 Retrieved December 11 2006 US Census 2005 Economic Survey income data Archived from the original on June 30 2006 Retrieved June 29 2006 a b Bruenig Matt March 24 2014 You call this a meritocracy Why rich inheritance is poisoning the American economy Salon Retrieved August 24 2014 a b Staff March 18 2014 Inequality Inherited wealth The Economist Retrieved August 24 2014 a b Pizzigati Sam September 24 2012 The Self Made Hallucination of America s Rich Institute for Policy Studies Retrieved August 24 2014 a b c d e f g h i j US Census Bureau personal income distribution age 25 2006 Archived from the original on March 19 2007 Retrieved December 28 2006 a b US Census Bureau income distribution of individuals employed full time year round age 25 64 2006 Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved December 27 2006 a b Ehrenreich Barbara 1989 Fear of Falling The Inner Life of the Middle Class New York NY Harper Collins ISBN 0 06 097333 1 a b c d e f Thompson William Hickey Joseph 2005 Society in Focus Boston MA Pearson ISBN 0 205 41365 X a b c d US Census Bureau income quintile and top 5 household income distribution and demographic characteristics 2006 Archived from the original on January 4 2007 Retrieved December 28 2006 Employment Characteristics of Families Summary 2021 A01 Results www bls gov a b c d US Census Bureau overall household income distribution 2006 Archived from the original on January 4 2007 Retrieved December 28 2006 a b New York Times quote households with incomes of over 1 6 million Archived from the original on December 31 2006 Retrieved December 28 2006 a b c d Potier Beth October 30 2003 Middle income can t buy Middle class lifestyle Archived from the original on December 29 2006 Retrieved December 28 2006 Rector Robert E Johnson Kirk A January 5 2004 Understanding Poverty in America Archived from the original on March 13 2010 Retrieved February 14 2012 Rector Robert August 27 2007 How Poor Are America s Poor Examining the Plague of Poverty in America Archived from the original on March 12 2010 Retrieved February 14 2012 a b c d e US Federal Reserve on wealth distribution in the United States PDF Retrieved July 12 2006 America Is the Richest and Most Unequal Country Fortune a b Americans net worth up for 3rd straight quarter U S Federal Reserve March 11 2010 Archived from the original on March 13 2010 Retrieved March 11 2010 a b c Growing Wealth Inequality and Housing in the United States Zhu Xiao Di Feb 2007 Joint Center for Housing Studies Wealth Inequality Data and Models Marco Cagetti and Mariacristina De Nardi Aug 2005 Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Households and Nonprofit Organizations Net Worth Level June 7 2018 a b Haskins Ron Wealth and Economic Mobility Economic Mobility Project 2007 Free exchange The real wealth of nations The Economist June 30 2012 Retrieved July 14 2012 Inclusive Wealth Report IHDP July 9 2012 Archived from the original on June 30 2012 Retrieved July 14 2012 a b US Census Bureau income quintilea and Top 5 Percent 2004 Archived from the original on January 4 2007 Retrieved December 27 2006 a b Income and poverty since 1967 US Census Bureau PDF Retrieved September 26 2006 a b Sargent Greg December 9 2019 The massive triumph of the rich illustrated by stunning new data The Washington Post Archived from the original on December 9 2019 Original data and analysis Zucman Gabriel and Saez Emmanuel The Triumph of Injustice How the Rich Dodge Taxes and How to Make Them Pay W W Norton amp Company October 15 2019 Dave Gilson and Carolyn Perot It s the Inequality Stupid Mother Jones March April 2011 Issue Who are the 1 percent CNN October 29 2011 a b Tax Data Show Richest 1 Percent Took a Hit in 2008 But Income Remained Highly Concentrated at the Top Recent Gains of Bottom 90 Percent Wiped Out Center on Budget and Policy Priorities Retrieved October 2011 Robert Pear Top Earners Doubled Share of Nation s Income Study Finds The New York Times October 25 2011 Kertscher Tom Borowski Greg March 10 2011 The Truth O Meter Says True Michael Moore says 400 Americans have more wealth than half of all Americans combined PolitiFact Retrieved August 11 2013 Moore Michael March 6 2011 America Is Not Broke HuffPost Retrieved August 11 2013 Moore Michael March 7 2011 The Forbes 400 vs Everybody Else michaelmoore com Archived from the original on March 9 2011 Retrieved August 28 2014 Pepitone Julianne September 22 2010 Forbes 400 The super rich get richer CNN Retrieved August 11 2013 Summary Results Public Date Estimates inflation adjusted to 2013 dollars Table 4 Survey of Consumer Finances SCF Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Retrieved September 13 2021 Wealth Inequality Inequality org Retrieved September 13 2021 Costa Pedro Nicolaci da America s Humongous Wealth Gap Is Widening Further Forbes Retrieved September 13 2021 Decades of rising economic inequality in the U S Testimony before the U S House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee Economic Policy Institute Retrieved September 13 2021 Addition reading on income mobility http research stlouisfed org publications es 11 ES1115 pdf Semega Jessica Chen Frances Kollar Melissa Shrider Emily A Income and Poverty in the United States 2021 PDF US CENSUS BUREAU Retrieved September 19 2022 Personal Income PINC 03 US CENSUS BUREAU Retrieved June 29 2022 Historical Income Tables Households US CENSUS BUREAU Retrieved June 29 2022 a b Evolution of wealth indicators USA 1913 2019 WID world World Inequality Database 2022 Archived from the original on July 5 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b Wealth Income and Power by G William Domhoff of the UC Santa Cruz Sociology Department Pensions Social Security and the Distribution of Wealth by Arthur B Kennickell and Annika E Sunden of Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Recent Trends in Household Wealth in the United States Rising Debt and the Middle Class Squeeze an Update to 2007 by Edward N Wolff Levy Economics Institute of Bard College March 2010 White House Here s Why You Have To Care About Inequality Timothy Noah tnr com January 13 2012 Krugman Paul October 20 2002 For Richer The New York Times Winner Take All Politics book by Jacob S Hacker and Paul Pierson p 75 CBO Report Shows Rich Got Richer As Did Most Americans View businessweek com October 31 2011 Archived from the original on November 3 2011 Oligarchy American Style By PAUL KRUGMAN 3 November 2011 The Broken Contract By George Packer Foreign Affairs November December 2011 Christoffersen John October 14 2013 Rising inequality most important problem says Nobel winning economist St Louis Post Dispatch Retrieved October 19 2013 Broder David February 4 2010 Syndicated column A sobering message Budget show US on unsustainable path Florida Today Melbourne Florida pp 11A US household net worth sets record Archived from the original on May 16 2015 Retrieved July 28 2015 a b Eichar Douglas 1989 Occupation and Class Consciousness in America Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 26111 3 a b US Department of Labor annual earnings for doctors Archived from the original on December 28 2006 Retrieved December 27 2006 Salary com Archived from the original on February 6 2009 Retrieved February 22 2009 US Department of Labor CEO salaries Archived from the original on December 22 2006 Retrieved December 27 2006 a b c Bureau of Labor statistics data published by Monster com 20 highest paying jobs Archived from the original on December 27 2006 Retrieved December 27 2006 US Department of Labor median income of Economists Archived from the original on December 28 2006 Retrieved December 27 2006 US Department of Labor median income of Mathematicians Archived from the original on December 28 2006 Retrieved December 27 2006 US Department of Labor median income of financial managers Archived from the original on December 16 2006 Retrieved December 27 2006 US Department of Labor median income of Software Publishers Archived from the original on December 25 2006 Retrieved December 27 2006 Chetty Raj Deming David J Friedman John N July 2023 Diversifying Society s Leaders The Determinants and Consequences of Admission to Highly Selective Colleges PDF Opportunity Insights p 2 Archived PDF from the original on July 31 2023 Figure 3 Ivy Plus refers to Ivy League schools plus others with similar prestige rankings or selectivity US Census Bureau personal income for full time year round employed employed workers age 25 Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved December 28 2006 B Drummond Ayres Jr December 19 2011 The Episcopalians An American Elite with Roots Going Back to Jamestown The New York Times Retrieved August 17 2012 Davidson James D Pyle Ralph E Reyes David V 1995 Persistence and Change in the Protestant Establishment 1930 1992 Social Forces 74 1 157 75 p 164 doi 10 1093 sf 74 1 157 JSTOR 2580627 a b How income varies among U S religious groups Pew Research Center October 16 2016 The most and least educated U S religious group Pew Research Center October 16 2016 a b c US Census Bureau household income distribution for Asians 2006 Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved December 29 2006 a b c d US Census Bureau household income distribution for Whites Archived from the original on February 18 2007 Retrieved December 29 2006 US Census Bureau household income distribution for Whites 2006 Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved December 29 2006 a b c US Census Bureau household income distribution for African Americans Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved December 29 2006 a b c US Census Bureau household income distribution for Hispanics 2006 Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved December 29 2006 a b c US Census Bureau personal income distribution for Asian Americans 2006 Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved December 29 2006 a b c US Census Bureau personal income distribution for Whites 2006 Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved December 29 2006 a b c US Census Bureau personal income distribution for Hispanics 2006 Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved December 29 2006 a b c US Census Bureau personal income distribution for African Americans 2006 Archived from the original on May 9 2011 Retrieved December 29 2006 US Census Bureau overall households income distribution to 100 000 2006 Archived from the original on December 30 2006 Retrieved December 29 2006 US Census Bureau Personal income age 25 2006 statistics forum Archived from the original on January 4 2007 Retrieved December 17 2006 a b c Levine Rhonda 1998 Social Class and Stratification Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8476 8543 8 US Department of Labor median income of registered nurses Archived from the original on January 2 2007 Retrieved January 2 2007 Johnston David Cay June 5 2005 The New York Times Richest Are Leaving Even the Rich Far Behind The New York Times Retrieved January 2 2007 Krugman Paul September 28 2014 Our Invisible Rich The New York Times Retrieved October 1 2014 Federal Reserve Board Survey of Consumer Finances SCF Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Further reading editFrank Robert L 2007 Richistan A Journey Through the American Wealth Boom and the Lives of the New Rich Crown Publishing Group pp 277 ISBN 978 0 307 33926 3 External links editAlternate income measures forum Americans Underestimate U S Wealth Inequality audio NPR 15 Mind Blowing Facts About Wealth And Inequality In America charts The Business Insider It s the Inequality Stupid 11 Charts that Explain Everything that s Wrong with America Mother Jones March 2011 US Census Bureau personal income forum US Census Bureau household income forum Introducing the Distributional Financial Accounts of the United States Federal Reserve March 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Affluence in the United States amp oldid 1194792403, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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