The notion of growing income inequality
in the US has dominated the Democratic primary, and a new study
provides insight into spending patterns of Americans who fall into the
extreme ends of the wealth spectrum.
That study from the JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Institute found the bottom 20% of America’s earners end up allocating a
bigger portion of their spending on one key necessity: fuel.
While the top 20% of earners had total expenditures
of just 3.5% on fuel, the poorest fifth of Americans end up spending
7.2% on fuel. That difference likely stems from the fact that everyone
who drives “must use a fixed quantity of gas to travel to work,” as the
JPMorgan study noted. In other words, poor people can’t easily cut back
on gasoline.
As you can see from this chart, though, the wealthy spend a bigger share of their total outlay on so-called durable goods — such
as cars and appliances. That’s because they have more discretionary
income remaining after covering necessary expenses such as gas and food,
which allows them to spend more on their wants, such as buying luxury
cars instead of a Ford.
To draw these conclusions about how the wealthy spend
their money, JPMorgan analyzed 15 billion different anonymized
credit/debit card transactions performed by 50 million different people.
Then, JPMorgan’s researchers mapped each transaction to the appropriate
income quintile and spending category.
As you can see from the image below, on an absolute
basis, America’s wealthiest 20% spend roughly 28% more on durable goods
than the bottom quintile. But the consumption gap narrows in other
categories, including nondurable goods. Those goods largely consist of
basic necessities, like groceries and clothing, that the poor can’t
simply forgo.
The rich do buy more expensive groceries — shopping
at places like Whole Foods instead of Walmart — but there’s a limit to
how much more expensive these necessities can get. Interestingly, the
amount the top and bottom quintiles spend on fuel is nearly identical,
which harkens back to the idea that everyone driving has to buy a fixed
quantity of gas to commute, rich or poor.
Culled from Yahoo
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