Sentences with phrase «disposable income per capita»

The NAIC notes that three variables — urban population, miles driven per number of highway miles, and disposable income per capita — are correlated with the state auto insurance premiums.
It's not really the ZIP code that the calculation is based on, but what the area of the ZIP code represents — factors such as population density, disposable income per capita and accident frequency, just to name a few.
Overall, the cost of living - adjusted disposable income per capita for Right to Work states in 2011 was more than $ 36,800, or roughly $ 2200 higher than the average for forced - unionism states.
«If a specific market welcomes a relatively large share of wealthy immigrants, their arrival creates a new source of demand that not only stimulates demand for housing, but can also raise house prices significantly without any changes to personal disposable income per capita
Finally, we divided the amount leftover, the savings per capita, by disposable income per capita to determine the personal savings rate.
And bear in mind, China's real disposable income per capita is growing at high single - digit rates.

Not exact matches

The rise in disposable per capita income has also been weaker, inching up just 0.6 percent annually in the last five years, compared with almost 2 percent from 1993 to 2008.
[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.
The demand for services in the Building Exterior Cleaners industry cum window cleaning line of business is on the increase in recent time, as growth in household formation rates expanded the available clientele base for industry players and rising per capita disposable income enabled consumers to purchase cleaning services they put off during the recession.
The rate of growth in real disposable household income per capita is only 0.9 percent per year.
The following chart shows that since February 2015, the growth rate of consumer revolving credit has nearly doubled from 3.4 % to 6.2 %, while the growth rate of real - per - capita - disposable income has been cut almost in half, from 3.2 % to 1.7 %.
And a recent report by the Institute for Competitiveness and Prosperity shows that if the GDP per capita gap between the US and Canada were closed, Canadian families would have $ 12,200 more in annual personal disposable income.
«Industry firms that provide subscription - based membership, however, faced revenue declines during 2009 due to declining per capita disposable income levels during the recession,» explains IBISWorld industry analyst Caitlin Moldvay.
The National Institute for Labor Relations Research reported that in 2011, when disposable personal income — personal income minus taxes — was adjusted for differences in living costs, the seven states with the lowest incomes per capita (Alaska, California, Hawaii, Maine, Oregon, Vermont, and West Virginia) lack Right to Work laws.
EIA expects household per capita disposable income to grow by an average of 3.2 % per year as more people have access to electricity and the ownership of electricity - using appliances and equipment (particularly air conditioners) grows.
According to Jones Lang LaSalle, per capita annual incomes average US $ 15,000 per year and disposable income is at $ 5,000 per year, he adds.
Real disposable personal income per capitaincome after inflation and taxes on a per - person basis — rose 1.9 percent, outpacing home prices over the entire period.
Using the latest Case - Shiller home price index American housing was 21 % undervalued when compared with disposable income per - capita.
Since 2000, house prices have risen 76 percent, while per capita disposable income has risen by 72 percent by the end of 2016.
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