Average, Median, and Top 1% Income by Race and Hispanic Origin This table contains the average, median, and top 1% individual income for selected races and ethnicities. Country-wide, the average individual income was $73,471.51 the median income was $50,200.00, and the top 1% income was $...
Median household income in the United States, by race and ethnicity from 1967 to 2023 (in 2023 U.S. dollars) ×Zoomable Statistic: Select the range in the chart you want to zoom in on. Median household income in U.S. dollarsAll racesWhite, non-HispanicBlackHispanic (any race)AsianAmer...
Though the United States is by far the wealthiest country in the world, income and wealth inequality exist throughout the nation, which can be evidenced in the difference in median income and poverty throughout the states as well as by gender and race across the board. Correction—Sept. 27,...
Examining income by race in America reflects racial disparities in education and opportunity more generally. For example, fewer Black Americans aged 25 and older have completed high school or have a bachelor's degree than any other race other than Hispanic Americans, according to Pew. Meanwhile, a...
Our data encompass the universe of income tax filers in the United States for the period 2000–2014, matched with individual-level race and ethnicity information from multiple censuses and American Community Survey data. We document both income inequality and mobility trends over the period. We ...
The purchasing power of household incomes: Worker outcomes through July 2024 by income and race. While incomes have not fallen behind price increases outright, gains over this four-and-a-half-year period have been disappointing, considering the expected career progression...
These disparities take form in various ways but most commonly involve geography, race and ethnicity, and wealth or income inequality. As the wealth gap in the United States continues to grow the link between income and health has become a more relevant and pressing issue. Although the poverty ...
…Teddy…enter the presidential race in 1912 as a third-party nominee. That split the Republican vote and handed the presidency to Democrat Woodrow Wilson. Wilson won with just 42% of the popular tally and went on to become arguably the very worst of our 45 chief executives. …I greatly ...
differential is relatively high in a majority of capitalist nations. Thus, according to data from the US Department of Commerce in 1967, 12.5 percent of the families in America (not considering single persons) received an annual income of less than $3,000. These families, on the lowest level...
Feldman and Star compared Black and White consumers with respect to "race, income, and eleven aspects of non-food shopping behavior" (3). The comparison was made by using "a simple cross-classification analysis, applying the Chi-square test of significance against a null hypothesis of 'no ...