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Graph and download economic data for Real Median Personal Income in the United States (MEPAINUSA672N) from 1974 to 2023 about personal income, personal, median, income, real, and USA.
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Wages in China increased to 120698 CNY/Year in 2023 from 114029 CNY/Year in 2022. This dataset provides - China Average Yearly Wages - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Graph and download economic data for Real Median Family Income in the United States (MEFAINUSA672N) from 1953 to 2023 about family, median, income, real, and USA.
In 2023, the usual median hourly rate of a worker's wage in the United States was 19.24 U.S. dollars, a decrease from the previous year. Dollar value is based on 2023 U.S. dollars. In 1979, the median hourly earnings in the U.S. was 17.48 dollars.
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Wages in Manufacturing in the United States remained unchanged at 28.87 USD/Hour in June. This dataset provides - United States Average Hourly Wages in Manufacturing - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
The dissolution of the Soviet Union saw a drastic fall in income rates across the region. In 1950, after the economic recovery period that followed the Second World War, income per capita in the Soviet Union was around half of Western Europe's rate. These figures did increase in the subsequent decades, before falling throughout the 1970s and 1980s, yet, in the final years of the communist system in Europe, income per capita was still around half of Western Europe's rate (albeit slightly lower than in1950).
By 2000, however, these figures had dropped below a quarter of Western Europe's income per capita. Most of this downturn occurred before 1996, and the economic situation in Russia, Ukraine, and the Baltic states began to improve in the final years of the century. It would take another few years before the economic situation of the other former-Soviet states would also begin to stabilize.
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This data collection provides selected economic, social, demographic, and political information for 48 states of the United States during the 1950s and 1960s. Variables describe population characteristics, such as the number of adults aged 65 and over, the number of dentists and physicians, the number of patients in mental hospitals, the death rates of white and non-white infants under one year of age per 1,000 live births, respectively, the number of recipients of public assistance such as Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), elementary and secondary school enrollment, enrollment in vocational programs, the total number of students in higher education, the number of those conferred with M.A. and Ph.D. degrees, and the number of workers in research experiment stations. Other variables provide economic information, such as personal income per capita, average monthly payment per recipient of some public assistance programs, average salary per month for full-time state and local employees, state and local government revenues and expenditures, and various intergovernmental revenues from the federal government for certain services. Additional variables record crime statistics, such as the number of robbery, burglary, larceny, auto theft, assault, rape, and murder offenses per 100,000 of the population. There are also variables that give information on each state's topography, such as the acreage of state parks, total farm acreage, municipal road mileage, and total unsurfaced road mileage.
In the U.S., median household income rose from 51,570 U.S. dollars in 1967 to 80,610 dollars in 2023. In terms of broad ethnic groups, Black Americans have consistently had the lowest median income in the given years, while Asian Americans have the highest; median income in Asian American households has typically been around double that of Black Americans.
When adjusted for inflation, the 2024 federal minimum wage in the United States is over 40 percent lower than the minimum wage in 1970. Although the real dollar minimum wage in 1970 was only 1.60 U.S. dollars, when expressed in nominal 2024 dollars this increases to 13.05 U.S. dollars. This is a significant difference from the federal minimum wage in 2024 of 7.25 U.S. dollars.
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Graph and download economic data for Federal Minimum Hourly Wage for Nonfarm Workers for the United States (FEDMINNFRWG) from Oct 1938 to Jun 2025 about per hour, minimum wage, nonfarm, workers, hours, federal, wages, and USA.
The Data-compilation is a selection of time-series on wage- and salary development as well as on the development of the national income in Germany from 1850 to 1985. The following studies has been included: - Walther G. Hoffmann (1965): Das Wachstum der deutschen Wirtschaft seit der Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts.- Rüdiger Hohls (1991): Arbeit und Verdienst. Entwicklung und Struktur der Arbeitseinkommen im Deutschen Reich und in der Bundesrepublik.- Pierenkemper, Toni (1987): Arbeitsmarkt und Angestellte im deutschen Kaiserreich 1880-1913. Interessen und Strategien als Elemente der Integration eines segmentierten Arbeitsmarktes.- Wiegand, Erich/Zapf, Wolfgang (1982): Wandel der Lebensbedingungen in Deutschland. Wohlfahrtsentwicklung seit der Industrialisierung. Tables in ZA-Online-Database HISTAT: A. Hoffmann, Walther G.: The Growth of the German Economy since the mid of the 19th centuryA.1 The average earned income per annum by industrial sector (1850-1959)A.2 The average earned income per annum in mining and saline (1850-1959)A.3 The average earned income per annum in industry and craft (1850-1959)A.4 The average earned income per annum in transport (1850-1959)A.5 The average earned income per annum in other services (1850-1959)A.6 Net national product (NNP) in factor costs in current prices and national income per capita according to Hoffmann (1850-1959)A.7 Gross value added and real national income per capita in prices of 1913 according to Hoffmann (1850-1959)A.8 The development of average earned income of employees in industry and craft, Index 1913 = 100 (1850-1959) B. Hohls, Rüdiger: The Sectoral Structure of Earnings in GermanyB.1 Nominal annual earnings of employees by industrial sector in Germany in Mark, 1885-1985B.2 Nominal earnings of white collar workers and blue collar workers in Germany, 1890-1940 C. Living costs, prices and earnings, consumer price indexC.1 Development of living costs (index) of medium employees’ households (1924-1978)C.2 Preices and earnings, index 1962 = 100 (1820-2001)C.3 Living costs, consumer price index (1820-2001) D. Pierenkemper, Toni: Employment market and employees in the German ‘Reich’ 1880-1913.D.1 Income of selected white collar categories in Mark (1880-1913)D.2 Real income of selected white collar categories (1880-1913) E. Wiegand, E.: Historical Development of Wages and Living Costs in Germany.E.1 Development of real gross income of blue collar workers in industry, index 1970 = 100 (1925-1978)E.2 Development of real gross income of blue collar workers in industry (1925-1978)E.3 Development of nominal and real national income per capita (1950-1978) E.4 Development of nominal and real national income per capita (1925-1939)E.5 National income: monthly income from dependent personal services per employee (1925-1971)E.6 Overlook: Development of wages, employed workers and gross income from dependent personal services in Germany (1810-1989)
This table contains 22 series, with data for years 1926 - 1960 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2000-02-18. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (11 items: Canada; Newfoundland and Labrador; Nova Scotia; Prince Edward Island ...), Wages and salaries (2 items: Based on Standard Industrial Classification; 1948 (SIC); Based on Standard Industrial Classification; 1980 (SIC) ...).
Aim of the study is to render the income distribution and income stratification in the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) form 1950 to 1970.
Topics: Tabulations in Online-Database HISTAT (Historical Statistics):
A. Synopses A.01 Sources of liquid income in percent (1950-1970) A.02 Personal income distribution in percent (1950-1970) A.03 Distribution of household-income in percent (1950-1970) A.04 Average income per household on social position of head of the household, Index (1950-1970) A.05 Distribution of private households on incomg-groups (1950-1970) A.06 Distribution of private households on size of household and incomg-group (1950-1970) A.07 Average yearly income per household in DM (1950-1970) A.08 Distribution of private households on number of persons receiving income and on income groups (1950-1970)
B. Development of functional and personal income B.01a Private households on household size and social position of head of the household in FRG in thousand (1950-1970) B.01b Private households on social position of head of the household and on income-receive in FRG in thousand (1950-1970) B.02 Development of household income in FRG in billions DM (1950-1970) B.03a Net-total income of the entire private households in the FRG im billions DM (1950-1970) B.03b Net-average income of the entire privat households in the FRG in DM (1950-1970)
C. Number of Net-income of private households C.01a Number of net-income of the entire private households in the FRG on income groups (1950-1970) C.01b Number of net-income of Self-Employed households in the FRG on income groups (1950-1970) C.01c Number of net-income of white-collar worker households in the FRG on income groups (1950-1970) C.01d Number of net-income of blue-collar worker households in the FRG on income groups (1950-1970) C.01e Number of net-income of retiree households in the FRG on income groups (1950-1970) C.02 Number of Households in the FRG on constant income groups in thousand (1950-1970) C.03 Net-annuity of housholds in the FRG on constant income groups in billions DM (1950-1970)
Z. Compendious statistical value schedules (1950-1985) Z.01 Statistical values of stratification of private household´s net-annuity and of families´ net-annuity on social groups (1950-1985) Z.02 Average monthly household income on social groups (1950-1974)
Compared to Western Europe, the development of average incomes differed between Scandinavia and and East-Central Europe between 1900 and 1950. Over these five decades, income in Scandinavia gradually caught up with the rest of Western Europe, eventually overtaking it by the middle of the century. By contrast, income across East-Central Europe fell further behind the west over this period, falling from 42 percent of the west's rate in 1900 to 37 percent in 1950.
From 1950 to 1973, Italy's social and economic structure underwent its largest transformation in modern history. Following the Second World War, the Italian government's restrictive policies that prioritized agriculture and limited both migration and urbanization were scrapped, and mass industrialization took place. Not only did this result in millions flocking from the countryside to cities in search of work, but this coincided with the expansion of welfare, healthcare, and education systems, which provided further employment opportunities in service industries. Increased industrialization and consumerism also resulted in the growth of the retail sector (included in services), and all of these factors contributed to the drastic drop in agricultural employment. Despite agriculture's share of total employment dropping by 80 percent over these 23 years, mechanization and investment meant that agricultural output in the 1950s and 1960s generally grew as the industry became more efficient. Over these decades, Italy's status as a poor and underdeveloped, rural nation changed, as it emerged as one of the world's largest and fastest-growing economies, even becoming the fourth-largest economy in the world for a brief period in the 1980s.
This data selection represents a thematic extract from the comprehensive study “The Growth of the German Economy since the mid-19th Century“ (“Das Wachstum der deutschen Wirtschaft seit der Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts”) from 1965 by Walter G. Hoffmann. The main objective of Hoffmann’s study is to work out statistical figures concerning the long-term development of the German national economy, as well as the individual fields of this subject area. In doing so, the time series shall enable the verification of various hypotheses concerning economic growth. This aim, however, can only be reached if such time series are based on comparable statistical, methodical, and content-related concepts, and if they are collected for a period with maximum length. Consequently, this data selection comprises more than 800 pages with 250 tables, featuring almost every time series between 1850 and 1960 that can be considered relevant for the economic development. Whenever necessary, these materials were completed by estimates. Moreover, the above-named analyses of long-term tendencies aim at creating a reference system for the numerous short-term changes occuring within most national economies in the course of a century.Here the special focus of Hoffman’s work lies on the visualisation of the gained materials as regards the raise, distribution, and use of the national income. The respective calculation is based on the two production factors of labour and capital and culminates in an overview of production. The calculation of the distribution, on the other hand, deals with the functional and individual, i.e. personal distribution of (earned and capital) income. In its turn, the calculation of use is divided into the sectors of private and public consumption, investment, and the national trade balance. Topics Timeseries data available via the downloadsystem HISTAT Data excerpt: earned income and capital income(income compilation, the following factors have been taken into consideration): - average yearly earned income in mining and salt-mines (1850-1959).- average yearly earned income in industry and handicraft (1850-1959).- average yearly earned income in traffic system without German Federal Railways, German Federal Mail, and shipping (1950-1959).- average yearly earned income in traffic system (1850-1959).- average yearly earned income in trade, banks, insurances, and hotel and catering industry (1925-1939).- average yearly earned income in trade, banks, insurances, and hotel and catering industry (1950-1960).- average yearly earned income of employed in the public service (1851-1913).- average yearly earned income in the public service (1925-1950).- average yearly earned income in other services (1850-1959).- average yearly earned income by economic sectores (1850-1959).- earned income by economic sectores (1850-1959).- rate of return of the industrial sector´s stock corporations (1926-1959).- distribution of net social product in factor costs in current prices (1850 – 1959).
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Romania Nominal Net Monthly Earnings: NACE 2: Avg: per Employee data was reported at 2,046.000 RON in 2016. This records an increase from the previous number of 1,859.000 RON for 2015. Romania Nominal Net Monthly Earnings: NACE 2: Avg: per Employee data is updated yearly, averaging 0.260 RON from Dec 1950 (Median) to 2016, with 67 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 2,046.000 RON in 2016 and a record low of 0.030 RON in 1950. Romania Nominal Net Monthly Earnings: NACE 2: Avg: per Employee data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Institute of Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Romania – Table RO.G023: Average Net Nominal Monthly Earnings: NACE 2.
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Disposable Personal Income in India increased to 296383300 INR Million in 2023 from 273364818.90 INR Million in 2022. This dataset provides - India Total Disposable Personal Income - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Graph and download economic data for Real Disposable Personal Income (DSPIC96) from Jan 1959 to May 2025 about disposable, personal income, personal, income, real, and USA.
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<li>Japan GDP per capita for 2022 was <strong>$34,017</strong>, a <strong>15.08% decline</strong> from 2021.</li>
<li>Japan GDP per capita for 2021 was <strong>$40,059</strong>, a <strong>0.04% increase</strong> from 2020.</li>
<li>Japan GDP per capita for 2020 was <strong>$40,041</strong>, a <strong>0.93% decline</strong> from 2019.</li>
</ul>GDP per capita is gross domestic product divided by midyear population. GDP is the sum of gross value added by all resident producers in the economy plus any product taxes and minus any subsidies not included in the value of the products. It is calculated without making deductions for depreciation of fabricated assets or for depletion and degradation of natural resources. Data are in current U.S. dollars.
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Graph and download economic data for Real Median Personal Income in the United States (MEPAINUSA672N) from 1974 to 2023 about personal income, personal, median, income, real, and USA.