2. After plunging sharply during the recession, real gross domestic product
has rebounded but remains anemic:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
3. Inflation, including volatile food and energy prices, remains tame, though
it’s higher than the recessionary levels it was at in 2009:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
4. Real (inflation-adjusted) personal income has climbed above where it was when Obama took
office. Surprise! But median household incomes have fallen since the end of the recession in
June 2009, according to Sentier Research. "Based on our data, almost every group is worse off
now than it was three years ago, with the exception of households with householders 65 years
old and over," Sentier's Gordon Green said in a statement released last month.
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
5. And household debt levels have come down significantly:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
6. Housing prices have stabilized, but remain well below their bubble-era
highs:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
7. While mortgage rates have fallen to historic lows:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
8. And the stock market has soared:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
9. But, the unemployment rate, which hit 10 percent in October 2009,
stands at 8.3 percent, still above the 7.8 percent of January 2009:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
10. And a more comprehensive reading of the labor picture including the
underemployed is also significantly higher than it had been:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
11. The labor force participation rate remains near a 30-year low:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
12. And long-term unemployment remains high:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers
13. As does the median length of unemployment:
Click here to read the article: Are You Better Off? Here Are the Numbers