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The State of Working Ohio 2007
Ohio Income Distribution 1988 vs. 2006
Source: Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) analysis of IRS and Census Bureau data, earnings for previous year
The State of
Working Ohio 2007 uses the best data available to document issues
facing Ohio workers. The report found staggering increases in inequality;
low job growth; rising productivity, hours and education; slight wage
increases; modest progress on disparities; and slight unemployment
declines. The chart pictured here is a highlight from the report, showing
that over the last 18 years, households in the bottom 60 percent saw few
real income gains while those in the 95th to 99th
percentile posted nearly a 24 percent ($40,000) increase in annual income.
The top one percent's income spiked more than 40 percent, from $698,000 in
1988 to $986,000 in 2006, rising more than seven percent just between 2005
and 2006. They earned over 26 times what middle-income households earned
in 2006. The report concludes with recommendations to innovate in five
areas where other states have bypassed us: investing in the future,
creating more opportunity, constructing on-ramps to the middle class,
building and protecting people's assets and retaining strong public
structures.
Click
here to read previous The State of Working
Ohio reports.
We are grateful to the Joyce
Foundation for the funding that underwrites this project and
to the New World, Sisters of Charity, Cleveland, and Gund
Foundations for other support.
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9/02/2007
Policy
Matters
Ohio
3631 Perkins Avenue Suite
4C - East
Cleveland, OH 44114
ph: 216/361-9801 fax:
216/361-9810
Columbus office:
614/486-4601 fax: 614/486-4603 |