from Sentier Research
New data from the monthly Current Population Survey (CPS) indicate that median annual household income was $63,425 in March 2019.
After adjusting for price changes, median household income for March of this year was $635 (or 1.0 percent) lower than January 2019. The median is only 3.5 percent above the median of $61,254 for January 2000, the beginning of this statistical series.
Median household income for March 2019 was 1.5 percent higher than March 2018, when the median stood at $62,473.
Median household income in March was 4.8 percent higher than the median of $60,534 for December 2007, the official start of the “great recession” and 14.6 percent above the post-recession low point of $55,360 that was not reached until June 2011, two years after the recession had officially ended.
Median annual household income has displayed a somewhat erratic pattern over the past several years. More broadly, there has been a general upward trend in median household income since the post-recession low point reached in June 2011. This upward trend was initially marked by monthly movements, both up and down. Many monthly changes were not statistically significant. By the summer of 2014 however, that uneven trend became dominated by a series of significant monthly increases. (See Figure 1)
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The general upward trend in median annual household income since June 2011 reflects, in part, the low level of inflation as measured by the CPI for all items used in this series, 2 as opposed to the CPI less food and energy. Energy prices have recently been fluctuating, which has had an effect on the CPI for all items. The CPI for all items increased by 0.2 percent between January 2019 and February 2019, and by 0.4 percent between February 2019 and March 2019. This uptick in inflation likely played a role in the decline of median annual household income during the same time period.
According to Gordon Green of Sentier Research,
Real median household income has continued to display an upward trend over the past 12 months (up 1.5 percent), and especially since the low point reached in June 2011 (up 14.6 percent). We continue to monitor the course of inflation, as this has a significant effect on the trend in real median annual household income. The decline in real median household income of $635 between January 2019 and March 2019 is likely related to the uptick in inflation during the same time period. We are at a point now where real median household income is 3.5 percent higher than January 2000, the beginning of this statistical series. Not an impressive performance by any means over a period spanning almost two decades, but the overall trend line has been positive for about seven years.
Additional Highlights
The March reading on the labor market from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows a similar picture as February, with one exception:
- The official unemployment rate was 3.8 percent in both February 2019 and March 2019.
- In contrast, the median duration of unemployment increased from 9.3 weeks in February 2019 to 9.6 weeks in March 2019.
- The broader measure of employment hardship, which includes the unemployed, marginally attached workers (of which discouraged workers are a subset), and persons working part-time for economic reasons, remained the same at 7.3 percent for both February 2019 and March 2019.
The Sentier Household Income Index (HII) shows the value of real median annual household income in any given month as a percent of the base value at the beginning of the last decade (January 2000 = 100.0 percent):
- The Sentier HII stood at 103.5 in March 2019, higher than December 2007 (98.8) when the “great recession” began, and higher than June 2009 (97.0), when the “economic recovery” subsequently began.
- The Sentier HII was 90.4 in June 2011, the low point in our household income series.
Copies of the report, Household Income Trends: March 2019 (9 pages as .pdf), issued in April 2019, can be obtained from the Sentier Research, LLC website at www.sentierresearch.com.
Notes:
Income amounts in this report are before-tax money income and have been adjusted for inflation; income amounts are expressed in January 2019 dollars and have been seasonally adjusted, unless otherwise noted. The estimates in this report are based on the Current Population Survey (CPS), the monthly household survey that provides official estimates of the unemployment rate. The CPS samples more than 50,000 households and approximately 135,000 household members each month. As is the case with all surveys, the estimates are subject to sampling and nonsampling errors. All comparisons made in the report have been tested and found to be statistically significant at the 90-percent confidence level unless otherwise noted. Household income is defined as the sum of the incomes of all household members. Income refers to all sources of money income including earnings from work, Social Security, interest, dividends, cash welfare, retirement pensions, unemployment compensation, veterans’ benefits, etc. Income excludes capital gains and losses, and lump-sum, one-time amounts. Household income is measured before the payment of federal and state income taxes and Social Security payroll taxes.
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