美国各州收入不平等状况图
Mapping US Income Inequality By State

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/mapping-us-income-inequality-state

美国的收入不平等仍然显著,顶层1%的人口控制着约52万亿美元——比去年增加了4万亿美元——并且需要80万美元或以上的家庭收入。这与30%的美国家庭年收入低于5万美元形成鲜明对比。 美国的基尼系数,一项衡量收入分配的指标,为0.48,表明收入不平等程度高;收入最高的20%的人口占据了全国超过52%的收入,而收入最低的五分之一人口仅获得3.1%。 不平等程度因州而异。华盛顿特区和纽约的不平等程度最高(基尼指数为0.52),特区收入最高的20%人口收入是最低的20%人口的27倍。相反,犹他州的不平等程度一直最低,受益于高就业率和强大的社会流动性,从而实现更均衡的收入分配。佛罗里达州、德克萨斯州和马萨诸塞州等州反映了较为平均的收入差距水平。

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原文

The wealth of America’s top 1% sits around $52 trillion today, rising by $4 trillion over the year.

Overall, the top 1% of U.S. earners need to make around $800,000 or more in salary per household.

Meanwhile, about 30% of American households earned less than $50,000 last year, highlighting clear divides in wage distribution across the country.

This graphic, via Visual Capitalist's Dorothy Neufeld, shows income inequality by state, based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

In 2024, the U.S. Gini coefficient was 0.48, representing a high degree of inequality.

Effectively, a score of one means that a single person would earn all of the income, and 0 would represent perfect equality. Last year, the top 20% of earners pocketed 52.2% of the country’s income according to the U.S. Census Bureau. In contrast, the bottom fifth of earners received just 3.1%.

Yet, income is distributed differently across states. Last year, income inequality was the most severe in Washington, D.C. and New York, each with a 0.52 Gini index score.

StateGini Coefficient 2024
District of Columbia0.52
New York0.52
Connecticut0.50
Louisiana0.49
California0.49
Massachusetts0.48
Illinois0.48
Florida0.48
Texas0.48
North Carolina0.48
Mississippi0.48
Pennsylvania0.47
Tennessee0.47
Alabama0.47
Georgia0.47
Washington0.47
New Mexico0.47
Arkansas0.47
Rhode Island0.47
New Jersey0.47
Kentucky0.47
Oklahoma0.47
Virginia0.47
Michigan0.47
West Virginia0.47
South Carolina0.47
Nevada0.47
Missouri0.46
Ohio0.46
Arizona0.46
Colorado0.46
Wyoming0.46
Montana0.46
North Dakota0.46
Maine0.46
Maryland0.46
Kansas0.46
Oregon0.46
Vermont0.46
Hawaii0.45
Indiana0.45
Minnesota0.45
Delaware0.45
New Hampshire0.45
Nebraska0.45
South Dakota0.44
Wisconsin0.44
Alaska0.44
Iowa0.44
Idaho0.43
Utah0.42

In Washington, D.C. the top 20% of earners made 27 times more than the bottom 20% in 2023 according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, which is the highest ratio of any state between the top and bottom quintiles.

New York, on the other hand, is home to more billionaires than any other state except for California, creating huge disparities in income. Since 2019, real wage growth among the Big Apple’s top 3% soared 34.5%, more than triple all other income tiers.

Falling near the U.S. average are Florida, Texas, and Massachusetts, providing a more representative picture of income inequality in the country.

In comparison, Utah ranks lowest overall, a position it has regularly held for some time. Utah has the sixth-highest employment share (65.4%) in the country, keeping average family incomes more even.

Along with this, Utah has one of the best social mobility index scores nationwide, likely influenced by narrower wage disparities.

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on wealth inequality by country in 2025.

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