A less efficient diversity case reduces real disposable income per household by about $ 845 (2016 dollars) annually, equal to 0.76 % of the 2016 average household disposable income.» (carlineconomics.com)
The Conference Board says by 2045, real disposable income in Ontario would be higher than it would have been without the ORPP. (moneysense.ca)
For all of 2012, the Group expects growth to be modest at 2.3 percent as a number of factors combine to constrain activity, including slow real disposable income growth, which should restrain household spending activity; a very small contribution from net exports; and continued fiscal contraction by the federal government, as well as ongoing cutbacks by state and local governments acting as a drag on growth during the year. (rismedia.com)