Spending Money

Where Disposable Incomes Are (Barely) Rising

Previously to the coronavirus pandemic, the growth of disposable incomes - the money that remains in peoples' pockets after they have taken care of their basic needs - differed widely in the OECD.

Eastern European countries like Poland, Estonia or Lithuania saw some of the biggest increases, but were surpassed by the OECD's newest member, Costa Rica. Here, people had 7.5 percent more spending money per year at their disposal, while the same number was 6 percent in Poland.

Western European countries did not see the same increases - with the exception of Ireland, where disposable incomes grew by 5 percent in 2019. The lowest increase was seen in Italy at just 0.2 percent, while Belgium, Switzerland, the Netherlands and South Africa barely surpassed 1 percent. The UK, Germany and France fared a little better, approaching 2 percent, but were still surpassed in disposable income growth in non-European countries like South Korea and the U.S.

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This chart shows the growth or decline of disposable incomes in OECD and affiliated countries.

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Monthly disposable income per multi-person working household Japan 2014-2023
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Per capita disposable income in urban and rural China 1990-2023
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Household debt as a share of net disposable income in Japan 2013-2022
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Quarterly change in real disposable income Japan Q1 2019-Q4 2023
Gross disposable income of households in the Netherlands 1999-2023
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Per capita disposable income of urban households in China 1990-2023

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