Incomes, meanwhile, have not kept pace:
Real disposable personal income in the U.S. has increased only about 5.5 % over the past two years, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis using inflation - adjusted numbers.
Real disposable personal income per capita — income after inflation and taxes on a per - person basis — rose 1.9 percent, outpacing home prices over the entire period.
Not exact matches
[181] Inflation - adjusted («
real») per capita
disposable personal income rose steadily in the U.S. from 1945 to 2008, but has since remained generally level.
Disposable personal income rose by 0.3 %, same as pre-tax income, while
real disposable income was up 0.2 %.
The bankers» ideal is for the entire surplus over and above bare subsistence to be paid in the form of interest and fees — all
disposable personal income, corporate cash flow and
real estate rent.
Tags: auto loans, consumer credit,
disposable personal income, federal reserve bank of new york, finance, Household Debt Service Ratio, housing, housing finance, mortgage debt, owners» equity,
real estate, student loans