National Post

U.S. wealth gap rises with Jackson Hole clocking in at No. 1

Wyoming town has top income per capita

- Augusta saraiva

When U.S. Federal Reserve officials head to their annual mountain retreat next week to talk economic inequality, they’ll be sitting in the country’s wealthiest county.

Wyoming’s Teton County, home to Jackson Hole, has the nation’s highest per-capita income from assets, according to a study by the Economic Innovation Group. The analysis found a sharp increase in geographic concentrat­ion of asset ownership over the past decades.

Jackson Hole, a rural community near the majestic Grand Teton National Park and renowned ski slopes, has attracted the ultrarich in recent years, pulling away from the rest of the country.

The EIG report, released Wednesday, specifical­ly looked at income from interests, dividends and rents. The gap between counties with the lowest and highest asset income per capita rose sixfold between 1990 and 2019, as income skyrockete­d in centres of finance, technology, mining and recreation.

Income from assets — a measure of wealth that excludes wages and government assistance programs — make for about a fifth of personal income nationwide.

It’s soared in places like New York City and the San Francisco Bay Area. Meanwhile, across Appalachia, the Deep South and much of the Midwest, it stagnated, representi­ng a negligible source of income.

“I was pretty shocked that so much of the country has derived so little benefit from the boom in asset prices and asset values that we’ve seen over the past couple of decades,” Kenan Fikri, research director at EIG, said.

Asset ownership offers people something to fall back on during periods of economic uncertaint­y that could result from unemployme­nt, illness, or, as it has been the case for many Americans over the past year, a pandemic. But for those who live paycheque to paycheque, saving and investing is hardly an option.

New York City epitomizes the concentrat­ion of wealth in the past 30 years, resulting in widening racial gaps.

Manhattan, where a majority of residents are White and have a college degree, has seen rapid growth in income from assets in the early 2000s and the 2010s, pulling away from the Bronx, according to the EIG analysis.

As a result, asset income per capita in the world’s financial capital, at about US$64,200, is now 13 times that of the neighbouri­ng Bronx, where 90 per cent of the population is non-white, the data show.

Nationwide, the county with the lowest asset income per capita is in South Dakota, home to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservatio­n. At US$2,800 per person, it’s one-third of the national average. Among the largest U.S. counties, the ones with the five lowest incomes from assets per capita are all mostly Hispanic or Black.

Only a minority of Americans holds assets beyond homes, cars and retirement savings.

About 15 per cent of households own stocks and 13 per cent hold business equity or other residentia­l property, according to Fed data.

EIG’S Fikri said that although “the condition of being poor today is better than it was in 1970,” some low-income communitie­s still don’t have access to “avenues for wealth creation.”

 ?? DAVID PAUL MORRIS / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Jackson Hole, a rural community near the majestic Grand Teton National Park
and renowned ski slopes, has attracted the ultrarich in recent years.
DAVID PAUL MORRIS / BLOOMBERG FILES Jackson Hole, a rural community near the majestic Grand Teton National Park and renowned ski slopes, has attracted the ultrarich in recent years.

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