Sentences with phrase «share of income spent»

Millennial Hot Spot: Downtown Albany Millennial Share of Population: 12.7 percent Share of Income Spent on Housing: 27.3 percent Unemployment Rate: 4.5 percent
Millennial Hot Spot: Thornton Park Millennial Share of Population: 14.6 percent Share of Income Spent on Housing: 34 percent Unemployment Rate: 4.4 percent
Millennial Hot Spot: Downtown San Jose Millennial Share of Population: 14.2 percent Share of Income Spent on Housing: 53 percent Unemployment Rate: 3.7 percent
Millennial Hot Spots: Mission, North Beach Millennial Share of Population: 15 percent Share of Income Spent on Housing: 56.2 percent Unemployment Rate: 3.7 percent
Millennial Hot Spot: Silver Lake Millennial Share of Population: 15 percent Share of Income Spent on Housing: 64.1 percent Unemployment Rate: 4.7 percent
Millennial Hot Spots: The Heights, Oak Forest, Timbergrove Millennial Share of Population: 14.5 percent Share of Income Spent on Housing: 36.1 percent Unemployment Rate: 5.4 percent
If rates rise to 5 percent (which some estimates suggest could happen within the next year) and homes continue to gain value as expected, the share of income spent on a typical U.S. mortgage will jump to 17.9 percent.
But while calculating the share of income spent on a mortgage each month in this manner allows us to compare across racial communities, it likely underestimates the true cost of a mortgage for many residents of minority - dominant communities.

Not exact matches

Congress should enact new spending caps along the lines of the Budget Control Act, which helped to shrink outlays as a share of national income from 2013 to 2017.
In the U.S., teens in low - income families spend a greater share of time online using social media and watching videos.
The bill's main objective — capping future government spending on healthcare at rates that won't gobble up a bigger and bigger share of national income, as well as leaving more resources for investment and entrepreneurship — is exactly what government needs to do.
Over the 12 - months ending September 30, 2015, S&P 500 companies have spent 64.6 % of their net income on share repurchases.
Farrell notes that colleges and universities tout the successes of their incoming students — test scores, academic achievement, acceptance rates, and the like — but rarely spend the same amount of energy sharing data about job placement and success rates of graduates.
About 64 percent say they aren't comfortable sharing their income and 53 percent say the same of their spending habits.
Likewise, the disinflationary tailwind of lower oil and gas prices should provide a much greater disposable income boost to lower income households than higher income groups, as the former generally spend a larger share of income on energy.
And among the approximately 1,000 firms that buy back shares and report R&D spending, the proportion of net income spent on innovation has averaged less than 50 percent since 2009, increasing to 56 percent only in the most recent year as net income fell.
Furthermore, demographic changes have augmented the number of younger households, which borrow against future earnings as they begin to establish families and careers, as well as the share of retired households, which spend beyond their current incomes by gradually reducing savings and selling assets.
Even so, the directors still recommended the payment of a dividend on the company's shares of five per cent, free of income tax, and the spending had even increased for the new season with the signing of Frank Casper, a 22 - year - old attacking midfielder from Rotherham United.
Americans enjoy the cheapest food supply in the world, spending the smallest share of their income on groceries of any country.
The OBR projects that, as a result, the share of national income spent by the state will fall from almost 48pc of GDP in 2009 - 10 to 39.5 pc by 2017 - 18.
In Japan, a system of lifetime employment in many big businesses, a tradition of employer provided benefits such as housing in many cases, and a wage system in those kinds of businesses where workers receive a substantial share of their annual income in the form of an annual bonus whose size can be used to buffer good and bad years for a company sharing risks and rewards with workers instead of limiting the risks and rewards to an investor class, have contributed to low levels of income inequality in the Japanese economy relative to comparably developed countries with comparable levels of government spending on welfare state type programs in other countries.
But ensuring that, over time, the state grows more slowly than the economy as a whole, so spending falls as a share of national income and we can reduce taxes and borrowing.
My spending plans in the last parliament reduced the share of national income taken by the state from the unsustainable 45 % we inherited, to 40 % today.
Under Alexander's legislation, states could opt to allocate the newly - consolidated funds to low - income parents, giving them much more say over how their child's share of federal education dollars are spent.
Specifically, we find that a 1 percentage point increase in the share of income received by the middle class is associated with an increase of $ 64 per - pupil spending on public school kindergarten - through - 12th - grade education.
Indeed, four decades ago the United States ranked second among high - income countries in education spending as a share of GDP — the broadest measure of a country's income level — with only Canada outspending us, according to the World Bank.
(cont'd)- I'm giving away hundreds of listings on the Vault, and as a result of doing so, won't see one thin dime of income on the site until October or later - Given all the time and money I've already sunk into developing the site, I don't even expect to earn back my upfront investment until sometime next year - I'm already personally reaching out to publishers on behalf of authors who are listed in the Vault, on my own time and my own long distance bill, despite the fact that I don't stand to earn so much as a finder's fee if any of those contacts result in an offer - I make my The IndieAuthor Guide available for free on my author site and blog - I built Publetariat, a free resource for self - pubbing authors and small imprints, by myself, and paid for its registration, software and hosting out of my own pocket - I shoulder all the ongoing expense and the lion's share of administration for the Publetariat site, which since its launch on 2/11 of this year, has only earned $ 36 in ad revenue; the site never has, and likely never will, earn its keep in ad revenue, but I keep it going because I know it's a valuable resource for authors and publishers - I've given away far more copies of my novels than I've sold, because I'm a pushover for anyone who emails me to say s / he can't afford to buy them - I paid my own travel expenses to speak at this year's O'Reilly Tools of Change conference, nearly $ 1000, just to be part of the Rise of Ebooks panel and raise awareness about self - published authors who are strategically leveraging ebooks - I judge in self - published book competitions, and I read the * entire * book in every case, despite the fact that the honorarium has never been more than $ 12 per book — a figure that works out to less than $.50 per hour of my time spent reading and commenting In spite of all this, you still come here and elsewhere to insinuate I'm greedy and only out to take advantage of my fellow authors.
They spend some or all of the income generated from the dividends but rarely sell any shares of stocks.
The debt - to - income ratio confirms the affordability of a loan by establishing a strict limit to the share of excess income spent on repaying a new loan.
When groceries were a bigger share of my income, I kept track of what I spent for a couple of months to figure out an average per month.
Since the rule of thumb is to spend 35 % of your net income on shelter, if Sonny Boy or Darling Daughter are living at home, insist that they cough up their fair share.
Name: Vanessa Lee * Age: 30 Location: Downtown Toronto Occupation: Nurse Feeding: Herself, and also sharing some meals with a live - in boyfriend Take - home monthly income: $ 4,500 Grocery budget: None Average grocery spend per month: $ 400 - $ 600 Percentage of net income spent on groceries: 13 %
In Seattle, for example, if rates rise to 7 percent, the share of income that buyers of a median home would spend escalates from 24.7 percent to 35.2 percent.
You can also see that the number of shares you own has increased without requiring you to spend your income purchasing more stock.
For example, in the notoriously unaffordable San Francisco metropolitan area, renters in white communities can expect to spend 48.8 percent of their income on rent each month — certainly a very large share of their income, but nevertheless small in comparison to minority neighborhoods.
The share of income needed to afford a typical home is still low relative to both the housing bubble years (2000 - 2007) and more normal times (1985 - 2000), when the typical household would need to spend 20 to 25 percent of their income on a mortgage, but it's quickly worsening.
Here's an estimate of how these numbers work out: If you'd invested $ 100 one - year ago at the beginning of last month, and the total return was 20 % and the yield was 6.7 %, then now you'd have ~ $ 6.70 in cash to spend (in your money market / cash / sweep account), and in addition to that, the fund would still be worth ~ $ 113.30 (because no shares needed to be sold to get the income yield).
Spending on necessities, as a share of all consumption, declines as incomes rise.
Economists label «luxuries» the things that account for an increased share of spending as income goes up.
As you know, in the land rising sun the coin - op industry is still live and kicking, and Sega — being the leader - has a major share of the national income (thanks also to its ownership of many arcade centers such as Club Sega and Sega Gigo, in which millions of yen is spent every year).
Pushed by grassroots environmental and social - justice groups, California has led the way on this approach, with 2012 legislation (Senate Bill 535) requiring that 25 percent of carbon revenue from the state's cap - and - trade program must be spent on clean - energy investments that benefit environmentally vulnerable low - income communities in places like Stockton, Fresno, Richmond, Riverside, San Bernardino, and Los Angeles (the targeted share for these communities was recently raised to 35 percent).
One might think that since there has been a substantial effort made just to ensure that money from California's cap - and - trade funds gets spent on California's own low - income residents (the focus of California's SB535; for recent news, see for example, here), there isn't likely too much appetite today for sending a share of the revenue overseas.
«High food prices are of major concern especially for low - income food deficit countries that may face problems in financing food imports and for poor households which spend a large share of their income on food,» Abbassian said.
This will cause power rates to spiral up, primarily harming poor and middle - class residents who spend a larger share of their income on energy.
Based on this economic evidence, the Indiana Child Support Guidelines calculate child support as the share of each parent's income estimated to have been spent on the child if the parents and child were living in an intact household.
The report found women spend more on healthcare, not only in dollar amounts but as a share of their income.
In states that utilize the income shares model for child support, the court uses the number of overnights that the child spends with each parent to calculate the amount of support.
Like many dual - income families, these parents had already decided they would each spend about the same amount of time with the kids, also known as shared parenting.
With the rate of spending growth keeping pace with income gains, Americans saved the same share of their disposable income.
«Spending on non-essentials will also go down when households spend a disproportionate share of their income on housing.
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