{"id":1604,"date":"2020-05-19T14:21:16","date_gmt":"2020-05-19T14:21:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/1db-blog.1db.com\/?p=1604"},"modified":"2020-09-11T14:44:51","modified_gmt":"2020-09-11T14:44:51","slug":"report-on-the-economic-well-being-of-u-s-households-in-2019-featuring-supplemental-data-from-april-2020-may-2020","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/beta.1db.com\/?p=1604","title":{"rendered":"Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2019, Featuring Supplemental Data from April 2020 May 2020"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>This report describes the responses to the 2019 Survey<br>of Household Economics and Decisionmaking<br>(SHED) as well as responses to a follow-up survey<br>conducted in April 2020. The Federal Reserve Board<br>has fielded this survey each fall since 2013 to understand<br>the wide range of financial challenges and<br>opportunities facing families in the United States.1<br>The findings in this report primarily reflect the<br>financial circumstances of families in the United<br>States in late 2019, prior to the onset of COVID-19<br>and the associated financial disruptions.2 At that<br>time, overall financial well-being was similar to that<br>seen in 2018 for most measures in the survey. Consistent<br>with economic improvements over the prior six<br>years, families were faring substantially better than<br>they were when the survey began in 2013. Even so,<br>the results highlight areas of persistent challenges<br>and economic disparities across financial measures,<br>even before the spread of COVID-19 in the United<br>States. In particular, the substantial disparities in<br>overall well-being by race and ethnicity remained in<br>2019, and the disparity by education widened in<br>recent years.<br>Yet, while most adults were faring reasonably well<br>financially, results also show that a substantial<br>minority of adults were financially vulnerable at the<br>time of the survey and either could not pay their<br>current month\u2019s bills in full or would have struggled<br>to do so if faced with an emergency expense as small<br>as $400. Even fewer had three months of emergency<br>savings to cover expenses in the event of a job loss.<br>This highlights the precarious financial situation that<br>some families were in prior to the COVID-19<br>pandemic.<br>The survey also explored long-run financial circumstances,<br>including returns to education, housing satisfaction,<br>and retirement savings. It included several<br>new topics that have not been asked in previous<br>years of the survey. In 2019, these new topics<br>included self-perceptions of discrimination, differences<br>in work locations by education level, and the<br>repercussions of outstanding legal expenses and<br>court costs. Additionally, the survey continued to<br>monitor emerging issues that may be important to<br>the economy in the future, such as experiences working<br>in the gig economy. Each of these topics is<br>described in this report.<br>Although the survey results reflect the financial situation<br>at the end of 2019, many families have had<br>their financial lives disrupted in 2020 due to<br>COVID-19 and measures implemented to limit its<br>spread. To understand the extent of these disruptions,<br>the Federal Reserve Board also implemented<br>a smaller follow-up survey in the first week of<br>April 2020 with some of the same questions that<br>were asked in the fall as well as several new questions<br>focused on recent events. This supplemental survey<br>demonstrated the substantial number of people<br>experiencing layoffs or reductions in hours worked<br>and the extent to which some families dealing with<br>layoffs have struggled to pay their monthly bills. Yet,<br>it also indicated that those not experiencing employment<br>disruptions generally were still faring relatively<br>well financially as of early April.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, differences in financial wellbeing<br>remained\u2014or had widened slightly\u2014across education<br>levels and across racial and ethnic groups.<br>\u2022 Seventy-five percent of adults were either doing<br>okay or living comfortably financially. This result<br>was unchanged from 2018 and was 13 percentage<br>points higher than in 2013.<br>\u2022 Adults with a bachelor\u2019s degree or more were<br>significantly more likely to be doing at least okay<br>financially (88 percent) than those with a high<br>school degree or less (63 percent). This gap in<br>economic well-being by education widened by<br>6 percentage points since 2017 and, in 2019, was<br>similar to that seen in the first year of the survey<br>in 2013.<br>\u2022 Nearly 8 in 10 white adults and two-thirds of black<br>and Hispanic adults were at least doing okay<br>financially in 2019. The gaps in economic wellbeing<br>by race and ethnicity remained at least as<br>large as they were in 2013, even as the economy<br>has strengthened and overall well-being improved.<br>\u2022 Sixty-three percent of respondents rated their local<br>economic conditions as \u201cgood\u201d or \u201cexcellent\u201d in<br>2019, with the rest rating conditions as \u201cpoor\u201d or<br>\u201conly fair.\u201d This was nearly unchanged from 2018.<br>Income<br>Changes in family income from month to month<br>remained a source of financial strain for some individuals.<br>Financial support from family or friends, and<br>especially parents, is one way that some people covered<br>expenses.<br>\u2022 Three in 10 adults had family income that varied<br>from month to month, with higher rates of volatility<br>among workers in the construction or leisure<br>and hospitality industries.<br>\u2022 One in 10 adults struggled to pay their bills<br>because of monthly changes in income. Those with<br>less confidence in their access to credit were more<br>likely to report financial hardship due to income<br>volatility.<br>\u2022 Ten percent of adults received financial assistance<br>from someone living outside their home. Occasionally,<br>people both gave and received support, as 2 in<br>10 people who received financial support also provided<br>financial support to someone else.<br>Employment<br>Although most adults were working as much as they<br>wanted to, many people were not working full time and<br>wanted more work. Many adults also performed gig<br>activities in the month before the survey, although few<br>who participated in the gig economy were doing so as a<br>primary source of income.<br>\u2022 Eighteen percent of adults\u2014including 25 percent<br>of black and Hispanic adults\u2014were not working<br>full time and wanted more work in late 2019.<br>\u2022 Among women ages 25 to 54 who were not working,<br>46 percent said that childcare or other family<br>obligations contributed to their employment decision.<br>Among similarly aged men who were not<br>working, a smaller 23 percent cited childcare or<br>other family obligations.<br>\u2022 Three in 10 adults engaged in at least one gig<br>activity, or informal work, in the month before the<br>survey, although many of those people spent a<br>relatively small amount of time doing so. One in<br>10 adults spent 20 hours or more per month<br>on gigs.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u2022 Technology did not drive most of the gig work<br>captured in the survey. Thirteen percent of all<br>people who engaged in gig activities used an app or<br>online platform to find customers and receive payments.<br>The rest found customers or received payments<br>some other way.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Dealing with Unexpected Expenses<br>The survey continued to observe improvements in preparedness<br>for small financial setbacks, although some<br>adults were unable to pay all of their bills in full or<br>would have been unable to do so if a modest emergency<br>arose. Medical expenses continued to be a concern for<br>some families in 2019, as many adults skipped medical<br>care or had outstanding bills from medical treatments.<br>\u2022 Sixteen percent of adults were not able to pay all<br>of their current month\u2019s bills in full at the time of<br>the survey. Another 12 percent of adults said they<br>would be unable to pay all of their current month\u2019s<br>bills if they had an unexpected $400 expense that<br>they had to pay.<br>\u2022 If faced with an unexpected expense of $400,<br>63 percent of adults said they would cover it completely<br>using cash or a credit card paid off at the <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>end of the month\u2014an improvement from half who<br>would have paid this way in 2013.<br>\u2022 Twenty-five percent of adults skipped medical<br>care, such as a visit to a doctor or dentist, in 2019<br>because they were unable to afford the cost, and<br>22 percent incurred a major unexpected medical<br>expense during the year.<br>\u2022 Eighteen percent of adults had unpaid debt from<br>their own medical care or from medical care for a<br>family member.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Banking and Credit<br>Most adults had a bank account and were able to<br>obtain credit from mainstream sources at the end of<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ol class=\"wp-block-list\" start=\"2019\"><li>However, substantial gaps in banking and credit<br>services existed\u2014especially among racial and ethnic<br>minorities.<br>\u2022 Six percent of adults did not have a bank account,<br>including 14 percent of black adults, 10 percent of<br>Hispanic adults, and 3 percent of white adults.<br>\u2022 Six in 10 adults were very confident that they<br>would be approved for a new credit card if they<br>applied. However, 4 in 10 black adults had this<br>level of confidence in their ability to obtain a new<br>credit card.<br>\u2022 Expectations for adverse credit outcomes can be a<br>barrier to credit access. More than 1 in 10 adults<br>chose not to apply for credit they wanted because<br>they expected the application to be denied.<br>Housing<br>Most adults were satisfied with their housing and most<br>own their own homes. However, younger adults, as well<br>as those who are black or Hispanic, were less likely to<br>own their own homes and to say that they were satisfied<br>with their housing than the overall average. Renters<br>faced varying degrees of housing strain, including<br>some who report moving due to a threat of eviction.<br>\u2022 Nine in 10 adults overall were satisfied with their<br>neighborhood, and nearly that many were generally<br>satisfied with their own housing. Eight in 10<br>black and Hispanic adults were satisfied with their<br>housing.<br>\u2022 Renters often said that they did not own because<br>of difficulty getting a mortgage. Sixty-four percent<br>of renters said that an inability to qualify for a<br>mortgage or to come up with a down payment<br>contributed to their decision to rent.<br>\u2022 Three percent of non-homeowners (about 3 million<br>adults) said that their most recent move in the<br>past two years was due to an eviction or the threat<br>of an eviction. Moves resulting from an eviction or<br>the threat of an eviction were twice as likely among<br>non-homeowners without a child as they were<br>among other non-homeowners.<\/li><\/ol>\n\n\n\n<p>Higher Education<br>Economic well-being generally rises with education,<br>and most of those holding at least an associate degree<br>said that attending college paid off. However, the likelihood<br>of pursuing and completing higher education<br>varied by race, ethnicity, and family background\u2014in<br>part due to additional barriers faced when pursuing<br>such education.<br>\u2022 Among people with at least a bachelor\u2019s degree,<br>7 in 10 felt that their educational investment paid<br>off financially, whereas 3 in 10 of those who<br>started college but did not complete at least an<br>associate degree shared this view.<br>\u2022 Many attendees of for-profit institutions would<br>have chosen a different school if given the chance<br>to make their decision again. Fifty-four percent of<br>those who attended a for-profit institution would<br>like to have attended a different school, versus onefourth<br>of those attending a private not-for-profit<br>or public institution.<br>\u2022 More than 6 in 10 black and Hispanic young<br>adults who left or did not begin college did so, at<br>least in part, to support their families financially.<br>Needing to work to provide financial support was<br>a reason for not starting or not completing a certificate<br>or a degree for 4 in 10 white young adults.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Housing<br>Most adults were satisfied with their housing and most<br>own their own homes. However, younger adults, as well<br>as those who are black or Hispanic, were less likely to<br>own their own homes and to say that they were satisfied<br>with their housing than the overall average. Renters<br>faced varying degrees of housing strain, including<br>some who report moving due to a threat of eviction.<br>\u2022 Nine in 10 adults overall were satisfied with their<br>neighborhood, and nearly that many were generally<br>satisfied with their own housing. Eight in 10<br>black and Hispanic adults were satisfied with their<br>housing.<br>\u2022 Renters often said that they did not own because<br>of difficulty getting a mortgage. Sixty-four percent<br>of renters said that an inability to qualify for a<br>mortgage or to come up with a down payment<br>contributed to their decision to rent.<br>\u2022 Three percent of non-homeowners (about 3 million<br>adults) said that their most recent move in the<br>past two years was due to an eviction or the threat<br>of an eviction. Moves resulting from an eviction or<br>the threat of an eviction were twice as likely among<br>non-homeowners without a child as they were<br>among other non-homeowners.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Student Loans and Other Education<br>Debt<br>Over half of young adults under age 30 who went to<br>college took on some debt to pay for their education.<br>Most borrowers were current on their payments or had<br>successfully paid off their loans. However, those who<br>failed to complete a degree, and those who attended<br>for-profit institutions, were more likely to have fallen<br>behind on their payments.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Among adults who had outstanding debt for their<br>own education in 2019, the typical amount of debt<br>reported in the survey was between $20,000 and<br>$24,999.<br>\u2022 Although most education debt is in the form of<br>student loans, this is not always the case. Twentythree<br>percent of people with outstanding debt<br>from their education indicated that at least part of<br>this debt was on a credit card.<br>\u2022 Among borrowers under age 40, those who were<br>first-generation college students were more than<br>twice as likely to be behind on their payments as<br>those with a parent who completed a bachelor\u2019s<br>degree.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Retirement<br>While preferences play a role in the timing of retirement<br>for the majority of retirees, unanticipated life<br>events contributed to the timing of retirement for a<br>substantial share. Although most people save for their<br>retirement and manage these savings on their own, at<br>the end of 2019 many non-retirees were struggling to<br>save, and those who did so frequently expressed discomfort<br>in making investment decisions.<br>\u2022 Collectively, health problems, caring for family,<br>and forced retirements contributed to the timing<br>of retirement for 47 percent of retirees.<br>\u2022 One-fourth of non-retirees indicated that they<br>have no retirement savings, and fewer than 4 in 10<br>non-retirees felt that their retirement savings are<br>on track.<br>\u2022 Nearly 6 in 10 non-retirees with self-directed retirement<br>savings expressed low levels of comfort about<br>making retirement decisions.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Financial Repercussions from<br>COVID-19<br>The Federal Reserve fielded a supplemental survey in<br>April 2020 to obtain an updated perspective on financial<br>conditions. This survey was conducted after the<br>passage of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic<br>Security (CARES) Act, but before most benefits were<br>received. This supplemental survey found that nearly<br>one-fifth of adults experienced either a job loss or a<br>reduction in their hours in March 2020 as the spread<br>of COVID-19 intensified in the United States. Over<br>one-third of those who experienced a job loss or reduction<br>in hours expect to have difficulty with their<br>monthly bills.<br>\u2022 Thirteen percent of adults indicated that they lost<br>a job in March 2020, and an additional 6 percent<br>said that they had their hours reduced or took<br>unpaid leave.<br>\u2022 Among those who lost a job in March 2020,<br>91 percent anticipated that they would return to<br>work for the same employer or indicated that they<br>had already returned to work.<br>\u2022 Eighteen percent of adults did not expect to be<br>able to pay all of their April bills in full. Among<br>those who lost a job or had their hours reduced,<br>35 percent did not expect to be able to pay all bills<br>in full.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Current Financial Situation<br>Three-quarters of adults at the end of 2019 indicated<br>they were either \u201cdoing okay\u201d financially (39 percent)<br>or \u201cliving comfortably\u201d (36 percent), matching<br>the rate in 2018. The rest were either \u201cjust getting<br>by\u201d (18 percent) or \u201cfinding it difficult to get by\u201d<br>(6 percent). The 75 percent of adults doing at least<br>okay financially in 2019 remained well above the<br>62 percent doing at least this well in 2013 (figure 1).<br>However, based on the results of a follow-up survey<br>conducted in early April 2020, it is apparent that<br>financial conditions have declined since that time<br>(see box 1 and the \u201cFinancial Repercussions from<br>COVID-19\u201d section of this report).<br>Despite the positive trend in overall well-being<br>through 2019, differences across education groups<br>remained substantial and grew in recent years.<br>Adults with a bachelor\u2019s degree or more were significantly<br>more likely to be doing at least okay financially<br>(88 percent) than those with a high school<br>degree or less (63 percent). This 25 percentage point<br>difference in financial well-being by education grew<br>by 6 percentage points over the two years from<br>2017 to 2019. However, the gap in 2019 was not statistically<br>different from that observed in the first year<br>of the survey in 2013 (figure 2).<br>Differences in financial well-being across racial and<br>ethnic groups also persisted in 2019. Two-thirds of<br>black and Hispanic adults reported that they were<br>doing at least okay financially, compared to 8 in 10<br>white adults.4 These differences in well-being by race<br>and ethnicity were statistically unchanged relative to<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ol class=\"wp-block-list\" start=\"2018\"><li>Although white, black, and Hispanic adults all<br>experienced improvements in their financial well-<\/li><\/ol>\n\n\n\n<p>Box 1. Overall Economic Well-Being in April 2020<br>Although financial circumstances were generally<br>positive for most adults at the end of 2019, financial<br>conditions changed dramatically for many families<br>beginning in March 2020 as the spread of COVID-19<br>intensified in the United States. For instance, according<br>to the Department of Labor, record numbers of<br>people filed initial claims for unemployment insurance<br>benefits in the final weeks of March and the<br>beginning of April.1 Recognizing this changing financial<br>landscape, the Federal Reserve Board fielded a<br>supplemental survey (\u201cApril supplement\u201d) over the<br>first weekend of April 2020 to obtain an updated picture<br>of families\u2019 financial situations.<br>Consistent with the employment declines seen in<br>other data, results from the April supplement point to<br>the substantial job losses that were occurring. Thirteen<br>percent of adults reported that they lost a job or<br>were furloughed between March 1, 2020, and the<br>time at which they completed the survey during the<br>first weekend in April. However, as discussed further<br>in the \u201cFinancial Repercussions from COVID-19\u201d section<br>of this report, most of those who lost a job<br>expected in early April that the layoff would be temporary<br>and that they would return to the same<br>employer. An additional 6 percent of adults reported<br>that they had their hours reduced or took unpaid<br>leave.<br>Similarly, fewer adults reported that they were at least<br>doing okay financially in April 2020 than had been the<br>case six months earlier. In the April supplement,<br>72 percent of adults were either \u201cdoing okay\u201d financially<br>(43 percent) or \u201cliving comfortably\u201d (29 percent).<br>This is down from the 75 percent of adults who were<br>at least doing okay financially in the fall of 2019 and<br>the 36 percent who were living comfortably.<br>These declines in self-reported financial well-being<br>were concentrated among those who lost a job or<br>had their hours cut (figure A). Among those adults not<br>experiencing a job loss or reduction in hours, 76 percent<br>were doing at least okay financially in April,<br>which is similar to the overall share of adults who<br>reported doing at least okay financially in the fall.<br>Among those who experienced a job loss or hours<br>reduction, 51 percent indicated that they were doing<br>at least okay financially in April, whereas 48 percent<br>were either struggling to get by or just getting by.<br>Recognizing that the April supplement was fielded<br>relatively soon after families began to experience the<br>financial repercussions of COVID-19, these results<br>may not reflect the full extent of financial hardship<br>that will result from the pandemic. Nevertheless, they<br>provide an initial indication of how families were faring<br>relative to the fall of 2019 as the economic environment<br>changed around the country.<br>For more information, see \u201cFinancial<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This report describes the responses to the 2019 Surveyof Household Economics and Decisionmaking(SHED) as well as responses to a follow-up surveyconducted in April 2020. The Federal Reserve Boardhas fielded this survey each fall since 2013 to understandthe wide range of financial challenges andopportunities facing families in the United States.1The findings in this report primarily reflect&#8230;<br \/><a class=\"button read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/beta.1db.com\/?p=1604\">Continue<span class=\"hide\"> Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2019, Featuring Supplemental Data from April 2020 May 2020<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":2212,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1604","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-blog"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2019, Featuring Supplemental Data from April 2020 May 2020 - Financial Advisors<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/beta.1db.com\/?p=1604\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2019, Featuring Supplemental Data from April 2020 May 2020 - Financial Advisors\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"This report describes the responses to the 2019 Surveyof Household Economics and Decisionmaking(SHED) as well as responses to a follow-up surveyconducted in April 2020. 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