THE ECONOMY IS IMPROVING, OR ECONOMIC RECOVERY IS WHAT WE HEAR FROM DC AND FROM MSM, BUT IS IT TRUE
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Household
Wealth Falls Considerably for Majority of Americans
By CEPR November 07, 2014 "ICH" - "CEPR"- A new report from the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) shows that most households now have less wealth now than they did in 1989. The report, “The Wealth of Households: An Analysis of the 2013 Survey of Consumer Finances,” presents data on household wealth by age cohort based on the results of the most recent Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF). The analysis shows little or no gains for the majority of Americans over the last 25 years, even in the years since the end of the recession. This is true of and particularly concerning for near retirees.
“This is
especially bad for those nearing retirement,” said Dean Baker, a
co-director of CEPR and an author of the paper. “Households in this age cohort
will not have a chance to benefit from any strengthening of the economy and will
only have the wealth they have accumulated to date to depend on in their
retirement.”
The authors
document several trends gleaned from the SCF. Between 1989 and 2013, average
household net worth rose from $342,300 to $528,400 in 2013 dollars. However the
average gains are misleading, as the population was older in 2013 than it was in
1989. More importantly, median net worth actually fell from $84,100 in 1989 to
$81,400 in 2013, indicating that much of the gains of wealth accumulation went
to those in the top quintiles. Other key points of the analysis
include:
When compared
with the previous Surveys of Consumer Finances, it can generally be said that
wealth grew in the United States from 1989 to 2007 and shrank from then on. At
the time of the 2013 survey, the stock market had almost recovered to its 2007
peak. House prices had not. With house prices representing a larger share of
assets for the bottom three fifths of Americans, this helped increase the
differences in wealth between the top and the bottom. All in all, the results of
the survey yield a pessimistic picture of economic progress since the end of the
recession.
The full report can be found here. |
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