|
Table 8
<br />
<br />1983 PERSONAL INCOME AND 1981-83 PERCENT CHANGE
<br />
<br />Population
<br />Rank, 1980
<br />
<br />Metropolitan
<br /> Statistical
<br /> Area
<br />
<br /> Total
<br />(Billions $)
<br />Number Rank
<br />
<br />1 New York* $114,479
<br />2 Los Angeles-L.B.* 104,896
<br />3 Chicago~ 82,340
<br />4 Philadelphia* 60,452
<br />5 Detroit* .54,501
<br />
<br /> Change
<br />Percent Rank
<br />
<br />Dollars' Index
<br />Per Capita to U.S.
<br />Number Rank Averaqe
<br />
<br />i 16.3% 8 $13,808 10 110.8
<br />2 13.2 18 13,417 14 107.6
<br />3 9.7 22 13,456 13 107.9
<br />4 14.7 13 12,700 17 101.9
<br />5 7.2 24 12,537 18 100.6
<br />
<br /> 6 Washingtoh 54,498 6 18.0 6 16,173 2 129.7
<br /> 7 Boston 52,516 7 18.7 4 14,297 7 114.7
<br /> 8 Houston* 43,170 8 10.4 20 13,655 12 109.5
<br /> 9 Nassau-Suffolk, NY* 41,521 9 14.8 ... 12 15,637 3 125.4
<br />10 Pittsburgh* 26,199 18 7.0 25 11,920 23. 95.6
<br />
<br />Baltimore 27,353 16 12.6 19 12,254 21 98.3
<br />Atlanta 28,795 14 20.9 2 12,492 19 100.2
<br />Minneapolis-St. Paul 30,428 13 , 15.0 11 13,781 11 110.5
<br />Dallas* 30,864 11 21,3 1 14,222 8 114.1
<br />Anaheim* 31,400 10 13.9 15 15,250 4 122.3
<br />
<br />11
<br />
<br />.14
<br />15
<br />
<br />16 Cleveland* 24,600 20 9.5 23 13,103 15 105.1
<br />17 Newark* 2T,947 15 .17.7 7 14,847 5 ~119.1
<br />18 San Diego 24,730 19 15..5 9 12,272 20 98.4'
<br />19~ St. Louis 30,459 12 ~13.8 16 12,710 16 102.0
<br />
<br />21 Miami* 20,859 23 14.3 14 12,131 22 97.3
<br />22 Tampa-St. Petersburg 20,107 24. 19.1 3 11,362 24 91.1
<br />23 Seattle* 23~408 21 9.9- 2! 13,955 9 111.9
<br />24 Riverside, CA* 19,443 25 13.7 17 11,188 25 89.7
<br />
<br />26 San Francisco-Oakland* 27,133 17 15.3 10 17,875 I 143.4
<br />27 Denver-Boulder* 22,647 22 18.3 5 14,504 6 116.3
<br />
<br />*Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas (PMSAs). After the 1980 census, the Department
<br /> of Commerce changed the definition of metropolitan areas slightly. The standard
<br /> metropolitan statistical area became metropolitan statistical areas. These were either
<br /> single metropolitan areas, such as the Twin Cities, or primary metropolitan statistical
<br /> areas, which were defined as separate metropolitan areas within a larger metropolitan
<br /> called a'consolidated metropolitan~statistical ar~a. PMSAs are used here because
<br /> are closer to our historic data series, i
<br />
<br />1!
<br />
<br />
<br />
|