Washington
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Americans
saw wealth plummet 40 percent from 2007 to 2010, Federal Reserve says
June 1 4, 2012
The recent
recession wiped out nearly two decades of Americans’ wealth, according
to
government data released Monday, with middle-class families bearing the
brunt
of the decline.
The Federal
Reserve said the median net worth of families plunged by 39 percent in
just
three years, from $126,400 in 2007 to $77,300 in 2010. That puts
Americans
roughly on par with where they were in 1992.
The data
represent one of the most detailed looks at how the economic downturn
altered
the landscape of family finance. Over a span of three years, Americans
watched
progress that took almost a generation to accumulate evaporate. The
promise of
retirement built on the inevitable rise of the stock market proved
illusory for
most. Homeownership, once heralded as a pathway to wealth, became an
albatross.
The
findings underscore the depth of the wounds of the financial crisis and
how far
many families remain from healing. If the recession set Americans back
20
years, economists say, the road forward is sure to be a long one. And
so far,
the country has seen only a halting recovery.
“It’s hard
to overstate how serious the collapse in the economy was,” said Mark
Zandi,
chief economist for Moody’s Analytics. “We were in free fall.”
The
recession caused the greatest upheaval among the middle class. Only
roughly
half of middle -class Americans remained on the same economic rung
during the
downturn, the Fed found. Their median net worth — the value of assets
such as
homes, automobiles and stocks minus any debt — suffered the biggest
drops. By
contrast, the wealthiest families’ median net worth rose slightly.
Americans
have tried to re balance the family budget but have found it difficult
to
reverse the damage.
The survey
showed that fewer families are carrying credit card balances, and those
who do
have less debt. The median balance dropped 16 percent, from $3,100 in
2007 to
$2,600 in 2010. The Fed also found that the percentage of Americans who
have no
debt rose to a quarter of families.
But that
progress was undermined by other factors, leaving the median level of
family
debt unchanged. The report said more families reported taking out
education
loans. Nearly 11 percent said they were at least 60 days late paying a
bill, up
from 7 percent in 2007. And the percentage of families saddled with
debts
greater than 40 percent of their income stayed the same.
Not only
were Americans still facing significant debts, but they were making
less money.
Median income fell nearly 8 percent, to $45,800, in 2010. The median
value of
stock-market-based retirement accounts declined 7 percent, to $44,000.
But it was
the implosion of the housing market that inflicted much of the pain.
The median
value of Americans’ stake in their homes fell by 42 percent between
2007 and
2010, to $55,000, according to the Fed.
The poorest
families suffered the biggest loss of wealth from the drop in real
estate
prices. But middle-class Americans rely on housing for a larger part of
their
net worth. For some, it accounts for just more than half of their
assets. That
means every step downward is felt more acutely.
Rakesh
Kochhar, associate director of research at the Pew Hispanic Center,
calls this
phenomenon the “reverse wealth effect.” As consumers watched the value
of their
homes rise during the boom, they felt more confident spending money,
even if
they did not actually cash in on the gains. Now, the moribund housing
market
has made many Americans wary of spending, even if their losses are just
on
paper.
According
to the Fed survey, that paper wealth — or what is officially called
unrealized
capital gains — shrank 11 percentage points, to about a quarter of
Americans’
assets.
The
findings track research Kochhar released last year that showed a
dramatic drop
in household wealth during the recession, particularly among
minorities. That
study found record-high disparities between whites’ wealth and that of
blacks
and Hispanics.
“It was
turning the clock back quite a bit,” Kochhar said.
The Fed’s
survey is conducted every three years. Although there have been some
signs that
the recovery has picked up — housing prices have begun to stabilize and
unemployment has fallen — Fed economists said those improvements
largely do not
change the survey results.
“Recovery
from the so-called Great Recession has also been particularly slow,”
the report
said.
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