The rich keep getting richer in New Jersey and the poor aren't keeping pace, new data shows.
Income inequality in New Jersey, or the gap between the rich and poor, now ranks 12th-highest in the nation, according to the latest 2012-2016 Census data. It's getting worse in 14 of the 21 counties, with the other seven remaining steady.
The Census calculates income inequality using a measure called the Gini index, which assigns a value between 0, which would mean complete equality, and 1. The closer a score is to 1, the more wealth is concentrated among fewer people and the bigger the income inequality.
As a state, New Jersey boasts a score of 0.4782. That's slightly higher than the last five-year period, 2007 to 2011, measured by the Census, but lower than the national average of 0.4804 over the last 10 years.
The state with the highest income disparity is New York with a Gini score of 0.5102, followed by Connecticut and Louisiana.
Here's the gap between the rich and the poor in all 21 New Jersey counties, ranked from best to worst:
2007-2011 GINI Index: 0.3917
2012-2016 GINI Index: 0.4076
Change: 0.0159
2007-2011 GINI Index: 0.3973
2012-2016 GINI Index: 0.4124
Change: 0.0151
2007-2011 GINI Index: 0.4036
2012-2016 GINI Index: 0.415
Change: None (within margin of error)
2007-2011 GINI Index: 0.4099
2012-2016 GINI Index: 0.4281
Change: 0.0182
Kaynak:Nj.com
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