Keeping track: income gap
Despite economic growth, inequality still spreads
As the economic juggernaut rolls along for most, some Americans continue to be left behind.
Below are the 10 states with the largest income gaps, according to report from the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The rating is determined by dividing the average top-fifth income by the average bottom-fifth income, resulting in a top-to-bottom income ratio. In New York, for example, the average income of the richest fifth of families ($152,350) is more than 14 times greater than the average income of bottom-fifth families ($10,770).
RankState
1 New York
2 Arizona
3 New Mexico
4 Louisiana
5 California
6 Rhode Island
7 Texas
8 Oregon
9 Kentucky
10 Virginia
Source: EPI/Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
The gap is primarily due to growth in wage inequality, the report says. Wages at the middle and bottom of the scale have only recently begun to budge, while salaries for higher-paid employees have soared.
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