The data below is a table showing the dat score percentiles for each of the four years of the 2020 U.S. Census. The chart shows that the median score score for census households nationwide is a 94.9.
While the trend is up, the overall trend remains much more downward than upward. For example, the 2019 median score is a 107.6, while the 2020 median is a 96.4.
If you’re willing to take a hard look at the data, or if you’re not, go looking for the data yourself. But if you’re willing to do it yourself, you’re probably in the right place. It’s not hard to see why this is a problem for us.
The data in the chart is for the 2020 decennial census. This is the first time that a large-scale, national household survey has been taken in the United States. It tells us that the American household has grown far more than ever in the last few decades, with the percentage of households living in poverty continuing to increase. The trend has been upward for most of the last twenty years.
The census numbers are still far from complete, but the trend is clear, and it’s not just the poor who are falling. The top 10 percent of the income distribution has actually seen the biggest gains in household wealth. That’s not only because of the booming stock market and other big changes in the economy, but also because the top 10 percent has experienced the largest increase in household wealth since the 1950s.
The top 10 percent of the income distribution in America have seen the biggest increase in household wealth since the 1950s. Thats not only because of the booming stock market and other big changes in the economy, but also because the top 10 percent has experienced the largest increase in household wealth since the 1950s.
The top 10 percent of income distribution in America, which includes those in the top 10 percent of the income distribution, has seen a rise in household wealth since the 1950s. Thats not only because of the booming stock market and other big changes in the economy, but also because the top 10 percent of the income distribution in America has experienced a growth of the fastest since the 1950s.
What’s interesting is that the top 10 percent of income distribution in America has experienced such a growth in wealth, but only the top 10 percent of American households have owned stock in the past 20 years, the bottom 80 percent of households have owned stock as of the most recent year and the vast majority of households haven’t owned stock at all. That suggests that the wealthy are the only group that’s been able to accumulate wealth in the past two decades.
If you’re not familiar with wealth distribution in America, its a statistic that shows how much money each group of American households has, or could have, over the past 20 years. Its a pretty interesting statistic, and it helps to explain why the top 10 percent of American households have experienced such a growth in wealth.
The chart above is based on American census data. If you’re not familiar with it, it’s a graph of wealth by income. Essentially, it shows how much money each household has on average in the past two decades. The top 10 percent of households in America have made the biggest gains in wealth, with the top 1 percent of households seeing the greatest gains.