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What is the Impact of Taxes and Government Handouts on Personal Income?

Income data from the BEA, Real calculations and chart by Mish

Chart Notes

  • DPI stands for Disposable Personal Income
  • Disposable Income means income after taxes
  • PCE means Personal Consumption Expenditures, in simple terms, consumer spending
  • Real means inflation adjusted by the PCE Price Index, not the CPI

Transfer Payments

Transfer payments are redistributions of money for which there are no goods or services exchanged.

Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and food stamps (now called SNAP) are examples of transfer payments.

Real Income Minus Transfer Payments is part of what the NBER looks at when determining recessions

Real Disposable Income Minus Transfer Payments

The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released Personal Income and Outlays data for January of 2023 on February 24.

Yesterday, I posted charts in Personal Spending Rebounds Strong in January, But What About Income?

My charts were accurate but my comment “Consumers went on a buying spree with a strong rebound in both goods and services. Income excluding government handouts is another matter” was off the mark. 

Today, I added a new line to my charts, Real DPI Minus PCTR. 

Neither the BEA nor Fred (St. Louis Fed data repository) provide that number. Fred does provide Real Personal Income Minus PCTR but that is a misleading number. 

With Fred charts, one can calculate Real DPI Minus PCTR. I added that calculation to my charts. As a crosscheck, my calculation of Real Personal Income Minus PCTR matches Fred.

Let’s take a look at how these numbers have evolved over time.

Personal Income Five Ways, Billions of Dollars Long Term 

Real Income data from the BEA, chart by Mish

Current Personal Income Five Ways

  • Personal Income (PI): $22,562
  • Disposable Personal Income After Taxes (DPI): $19,595
  • Real (Inflation-Adjusted) DPI: $15,568
  • Real Personal Income Minus PCTR: $14,741
  • Real DPI Minus PCTR: $12,384

The impact of government handouts and inflation get more and more extreme over time.

Note that Real DPI Minus PCTR has not grown in nearly three years. 

Personal Current Transfer Receipts

Personal Current Transfer Receipts (PCTR) data from BEA, Real PCTR calculation by Mish.

PCTR is up 26% pre-Covid. Biden is begging for more.

Those three rounds of fiscal stimulus coupled with eviction moratoriums and student debt cancellation fueled inflation. 

Personal Current Transfer Receipts Percent Change

Personal Current Transfer Receipts (PCTR) data from BEA, Real PCTR calculation by Mish.

In real terms, PCTR dropped significantly in January. This is almost entirely due to the PCE price index rising by 0.6 percent. 

In nominal terms, PCTR only declined 0.01 percent. 

Personal Income Five Ways Percent Change 

That is the chart that matters most and it’s one that I did not have yesterday, nor have I seen posted anywhere else.

Month-Over-Month Personal Income

  • Personal Income: 0.58
  • DPI: 2.02
  • Real DPI: 1.39
  • Real PI Minus PCTR: 0.09
  • Real DPI Minus PCTR: 1.92

That last line is a real kicker.

Although Real DPI Minus PCTR has gone nowhere for three years, it took a big leap in January. This will certainly catch the Fed’s attention. 

I will explain the jump in a follow-up post. 

Who Is to Blame for Inflation?

President Trump, President Biden, Congress, and the Fed have all played a roll in the inflationary mess we are in. 

One can also blame the War in Ukraine and Covid, but supply chain disruptions of Covid were temporary. Policy responses, however, are ongoing. 

President Biden’s push for more free education, unions, EVs, and student debt cancellation are hugely inflationary. 

So is the administration’s political response to the war in Ukraine. 

How the Fed Messes With People’s Lives 

The Fed is attempting to undo the damage it has caused by hiking rates. 

Alas, it is impossible for the Fed to quickly, if ever, undo the damage it has done. 

For discussion, please see How the Fed Messes With People’s Lives From a Mortgage Rate Perspective

This post originated at MishTalk.Com

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37 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
3 years ago
The economy is being run in reverse. The Keynesian economists have achieved their objective, that there is no difference between money and liquid assets. The result is interest rate manipulation as the monetary transmission mechanism. But interest is the price of credit. The price of money is the reciprocal of the price level.
Monetarism has never been tried. An increase in reserve requirements or reserve ratios immediately depresses prices. There is no lag effect.
But Powell destroyed deposit classifications and removed reserve requirements. Powell believes banks are intermediaries.
It took several years for Volcker’s inflation to subside. It’ll take several years for Powell’s inflation to subside. Volcker reaccelerated inflation by mistake – which extended the time inflation receded. Maybe Powell learned something from Volcker’s errors.
Powell should have known that the money stock can never be properly managed by any attempt to control the cost of credit. The 1951 Treasury-Reserve Accord should have established the validity of that dictum.
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
3 years ago
Reply to  Salmo Trutta
Recessions occur when the short-term rate-of-change in money flows, the volume and velocity of money, decelerate, turn negative. That would portend a drop in Vt, the transaction’s velocity of funds.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Salmo Trutta
Recessions occur when it is no longer profitable to employ people and they become out-of-work.
Duh.
LawrenceBird
LawrenceBird
3 years ago
Covid was about more than supply chain disruptions. It was catalyst for a reset in what many people saw as the type of work they wanted to do. Those labor dislocations are still having an effect, both in terms of supply of goods/services but also labor cost pressures.
PreCambrian
PreCambrian
3 years ago
So if DPI is increasing faster than PI then taxes must be going down.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
taxes and disbursed funds, used for poor folks or middle brows and NOT for us rich fellas is just PURE THEFT
Rbm
Rbm
3 years ago
Mish. I wonder what the consequences would be if all of these programs were dropped. What would happen if say half the healthcare industry and the jobs they support disappear from the economy.
Better have a plan is all im saying.
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Reply to  Rbm
I have a plan. And I continue to execute that plan.
Instead of wasting my time complaining about the way the world works, take advantage of how the world works and get so wealthy, you don’t care about whatever inequities exist.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  PapaDave
Papa, please let us know when you have enough money.
It is good to have goals.
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
I have plenty already. But better safe than sorry.
And money isn’t my sole focus. I am involved in many useful pursuits; I’m an exercise junkie; and I enjoy my family and friends immensely.
But no one needs to hear that in the comments section of an economics blog. So money is my focus here.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  PapaDave
I don’t care. I really need to turn into an exercise junkie and would appreciate any tips you could forward. Thanks in advance.
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
Lol! No exercise tips. You have to want it.
Okay. One tip. Start slow. Don’t overdo it at first or you will give up. But do something every day; even if its just a little. Walk a lot before you run. Light weights before heavy. Find what you like. It could even be pickle ball or dancing. It could be a fitness club or it can be entirely on your own. Its a lifelong journey. Not a race or a competition. But if you don’t like it, you will quit.
Rbm
Rbm
3 years ago
Reply to  PapaDave
Well to some degree i agree with you. Also economic problems turn into society problems and your wealth might not be enough to save you.
Give you an example. I have some friends in Brazil who are well of and their son got kidnapped and ransomed back.
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Reply to  Rbm
There are always problems. That never changes. The question is how resilient and prepared are you when they happen.
I want to be as self reliant as I can be, so I don’t end up in the crowd of complainers.
Too many here seem to spend the majority of their time complaining. What a waste of time.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
DPI minus PCTR since 1989 tells an ugly truth, the middle class is being bled dry.
Over that time period it was globalization/outsourcing and the promise of “job creating tax cuts” for the wealthiest that, in reality, resulted in jobs created in China, Mexico, Taiwan..etc.
All the wile, more and more “job creating tax cuts” for the biggest campaign donors have been passed out, while at the same time the same politicians press for cuts to social entitlements to balance the budget.
.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Two comments were just relegated to admin purgatory, geez
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
this site is very uptight. i was banned for 24 hours. i have not a clue. seems so funny. and stupid. like it’s a nursery school classroom. bwwwwaaahhhhhh
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
Interesting.
How do you know you were banned?
Did you receive a notification by email or just simple could not log on?
Who banned you?
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack
email. 24 hour time out. hasn’t happened since Kindergarten. too funny. made my week hysterically fullfilling.
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
No way – something you said?
Any slanderous, racial, or inflammatory statements?
The censor police are out.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack
ha ha . hell no. i just typed the term rat’s a**, and was rejected. ha ha ha. mish is running this site like a church lady. too funny. inflammatory. i guess by this joint’s standards, yes. by adult standards, not a shot in H E double tootpicks.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
DPI minus PCTR since 1989 tells us that the government is paying for economic growth for lack of wage growth, using debt. …it shows the middle class slowly bleeding dry without artificial help.
That said, 2008 was very revealing, in the aftermath of removing Glass-Steagall and creating the CFMA, big (TBTF) banks became omnipotent – they can originate debt derivatives, make money on the interest, while selling off their risk to the open market while being allowed to hide contrarian derivatives/futures positions. In an economy that’s increasingly coercing the middle class to borrow.
At that time in 2008 –
Oil just happened to surge to $145/barrel, with no supply shortage, no surge in demand, so conspicuously that the Pentagon investigated it for potential “Financial terrorism”, they worried it might be Al Qaeda manipulating oil futures.
It was enough to impinge DPI, just enough to start the sub-prime defaults when household debt was dangerously high..
We later learned it was the big banks holding the bulk of oil futures in ’08, thanks to a CFTC leak by Bernie Sanders, circa 2010.
Meanwhile, the same banks were short positioned the sub-prime market, it was no coincidence Goldman Sachs paid all time record prop desk bonuses in 2009 while the market was bottoming and regular Americans were being evicted en mass.
I mention all this for the fact that I find myself wondering how much of the recent inflation was really demand driven vs futures speculation, as well as supply related.
I completely distrust a government that’s owned and operated by campaign donors, not just one political party or the other – the whole government, I don’t trust the information it feeds us, I don’t trust the purportedly “free market” it regulates, I don’t trust this definition of “capitalism” either.
.
.
.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Real DPI minus PCTR since 1989 reveals a disturbing reality, and I suspect it’s probably not what Mish intended, consumption is becoming increasingly dependant on “the dole” as a result of declining middle class wages.
I’d bet money this is the result of a combination of global trade/outsourcing, union busting and Reaganomics tax cuts for the wealthy – the blind assumption that increasing wealth to the wealthy results in “job creating” investment, and it has, in China, Mexico, Taiwan…etc.
Also, I recall more than a few robust debates on CNBC back in 2008 over futures speculation’s effects on inflation, it turned out that the big banks played a major role in oil’s mysterious surge to $145/barrel in 2008, which stretched disposable incomes and sparked the sub-prime defaults that the same banks were short….
Remembering Goldman Sachs paying out all-time record breaking prop desk bonuses right as the market was bottoming.
That said, I find myself wondering what % of recent inflation is futures speculation vs real demand.
I don’t feel like a conspiracy theorist to consider the possibility that investment banks are positioning (or have in the past year) for a major stock market route by manipulating commodity prices higher to force the fed’s hand.
Back in 2008, when oil was at $145, there was no supply shortage, no demand surge either, even the Pentagon investigated it as potential financial terrorism for fear Bin Ladin had manipulated oil prices….so it’s not unreasonable to ask questions now.
..
.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
The damage was done by the Voohan virus. US was comatose until we know what we don’t. The Fed saved our lives, gave us money
to buy food, declared moratorium on rent, student loans, supported our small businesses… and gave shingle mums with kids 10K to vote for Trump. We bit the hands that loved us. We puked. We deposed him, We hate his guts, because he lied, always lied, stole from us.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
With a possible gov shut down in June Fed rates will rise moderately, below inflation rates. The Dow might preempt.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Not only is taxation just a fancy way of saying”tribute”, it always has a negative effect on the general population. It’s only positive for the parasites and their cronies (think of all those corporations and their Government contracts). And the things they do with those monies are never in the public’s best interests.
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
Indeed…. Life was so much freer when you could drive on all those naturally occurring roads, not these inferior artificial ones they replaced them with!
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
In the past companies would build / invest in toll roads. If you have enough of them it would create competition and lowers price.
Less competition = higher prices , which would increase downtown density and allow competing subways to be created.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack
More cooperation = higher prices, and enables people that don’t like each other to play tennis and golf together.
PreCambrian
PreCambrian
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
You need to move to Ethiopia or Malawi so you won’t be taxed. I am not saying that the government is doing everything correctly but where there is no government life is much much worse.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  PreCambrian
YOU are so naive it’s precious. please never change.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  PreCambrian
I ain’t moving. Freedom begins in your heart. If you keep thinking that your freedom comes from some external force, you won’t ever be free. People keep themselves enslaved. All those squabbles that get thrown at you are just b.s.. Ukraine, climate change, left, right, whatever. Divide and distract with their shadow shows. The emperor has always been naked. Once that really sinks in, you can be free. But location means nothing. We are our own enslavers and we’re at every location we go.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
Nothin’ ain’t worth nothin’, but it’s free.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
taxes have always been for the little people. since beginning of human primates existence. the modern amerikan middlebrows are wonderfully great useful idiots. just read the rule book of our game board, kids. the IRS CODE IS CHOCK FULL OF FREE MONEY FOR THE SMART KIDS.
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
You recommending to buy a farm?
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack
i’m recommending studying the IRS code and regs. food, energy, armies, housing etc…………has always been in the preferred taxation of all governments for thousands of years. this ain’t really too difficult. it’s anthropology and economics 101. i’m just so glad they keep the middlebrows in pax dumbphuckistan so naive, on the ways of the world. taxes have always been for the little people. it’s what they are there for.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
When I got out of the army, I went to college. One of the first books I read was the JK Lassler (wild guess on the name) 1986 tax code. Because of that book, I was able to adjust my income so that I never had to pay taxes. Qualified me for numerous grants, yes I will take all I can get and give as little as I can. I’m no longer current on the tax codes, and I doubt the versions available now come straight from the beast’s mouth. I also helped many of my friends who were juggling their businesses and college.

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