Income inequality in the United States has looked about the same for years now: The richest 10% of households earn more than a third of all income, and the poorest earn less than 2%.
In Minnesota, these ratios are slightly better — enough to rank the state among the least unequal.
“For the level of income we have, we don’t have a lot of inequality,” said Fabrizio Perri, an economist at the Minneapolis Fed. “Even people at the bottom 10% do relatively well compared to the median. That’s an important feature of Minnesota.”
The disparity is still bigger than gaps seen in some European countries, and Minnesotans are less likely to climb the income ladder — or fall down it — than other Americans.
Given Minnesota’s access to education, health care and a low unemployment rate, the state “could do even better than other states” than it already does, Perri said.
High income inequality can have widespread consequences, restraining overall economic growth, research shows.
“In particular, what matters most is the gap between low-income households and the rest of the population,” according to a widely cited OECD study. “In contrast, no evidence is found that those with high incomes pulling away from the rest of the population harms growth.”
New data from the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis allows for income inequality comparisons between states based on a snapshot of personal income.