FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:                                          FOR RELEASE: 
Cheryl Abbot                                                      Thursday,
Regional Economist                                                March 6, 2008
(214) 767-6970                                       
http://www.bls.gov/ro6/



     CONSUMER SPENDING PATTERNS IN THE DALLAS-FORT WORTH METROPOLITAN AREA
                                    2005-2006

    Consumer units  in the Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas metropolitan area spent an 
average of $53,294 per year in 2005-2006, according to results from the Bureau 
of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Expenditure Survey.  Regional Commissioner 
Stanley W. Suchman noted that this figure was 12.4 percent higher than the U.S. 
average household expenditure of $47,421 during the same period.  Although 
local households spent more than the national average, they tended to allocate 
their dollars similarly among the major categories, differing significantly in 
only 5 of the 14 categories.  (See table 1.)  Expenditures for personal 
insurance and pensions accounted for a significantly larger  portion of the 
total budget in the Dallas area compared to the United States, whereas spending 
on entertainment represented a significantly smaller-than-average share of the 
local budget.  (See chart A.)

Chart A.  Percent distribution of total average expenditures for selected 
categories, United States and Dallas metropolitan area, Consumer Expenditure 
Survey, 2005-2006

Percent distribution of total average expenditures for selected categories,
United States and Dallas metropolitan area, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2005-2006

     This report contains annual data averaged over a two-year period, 2005 and 
2006.  The data are from the Consumer Expenditure Survey (CE), which is 
collected on an ongoing basis by the U.S. Census Bureau for the Bureau of Labor 
Statistics (BLS).  The Consumer Expenditure Survey is the only national survey 
that provides both complete data on household expenditures and the demographic 
characteristics of those households.  CE data are available for the nation, the 
4 geographic regions of the country, and 18 metropolitan areas.  Survey data 
cannot be used to make cost of living comparisons between areas.  Expenditures 
vary among areas not only because of economic factors such as the prices of 
goods and services and family income, but also because of differences such as 
the age of the population, climate, consumer tastes, family size, etc.  
However, expenditure shares, or the percentage of a consumer unit’s budget 
spent on a particular category, can be used to compare spending patterns across 
areas.  The survey provides average expenditures for consumer units.  An 
individual consumer unit may spend more or less than the average, depending on 
its particular characteristics.

     Though data for 18 metropolitan areas were available for the 2005-06 
period, 3 in particular—Houston, Miami, and Atlanta—were selected for 
comparison with Dallas, as they were all located in the South and had 
populations that were similar in size.

     Housing, the largest expenditure category, accounted for 33.5 percent of a 
Dallas area household’s total budget; this share was not significantly 
different from the 33.3-percent national average.  (See table 1.)  Houston, at 
30.6 percent, had a housing share below that for the United States while 
housing shares were significantly higher than average in Miami (37.6 percent) 
and Atlanta (37.0 percent).

     The majority of housing expenditures in Dallas went toward shelter costs 
(55.4 percent), which include mortgage interest, property taxes, repairs, and 
rent, among other items.  Nationally, shelter costs accounted for 58.6 percent.  
(See table A.)  Utilities, fuels, and public services expenses accounted for 
24.8 percent of total housing expenditures in Dallas, but only 20.9 percent 
nationwide.  At 65 percent, the rate of homeownership in Dallas was below the 
national average of 67 percent.  Homeownership rates were higher than the 
national average in Houston (70 percent) and Atlanta (69 percent), but lower in 
Miami (63 percent).  (See table 2 for detailed expenditures.)


Table A. Percent distribution of housing expenditures, United States and selected
metropolitan areas, 2005-2006
=====================================================================================
                                         United   
            Category                     States   Dallas   Atlanta  Houston   Miami
=====================================================================================
Total housing                             100.0    100.0     100.0    100.0    100.0 
  Shelter                                  58.6     55.4      59.0     54.8     63.1 
  Utilities, fuels, and public services    20.9     24.8      23.4     24.3     21.5 
  Household operations                      5.5      6.4       6.1      6.9      5.4 
  Housekeeping supplies                     4.0      4.0       3.4      4.3      3.3 
  Household furnishings and equipment      11.0      9.5       8.1      9.8      6.7 
=====================================================================================
Note: Columns may not add to 100 due to rounding.


     Transportation, the second-largest expenditure category in the Dallas area 
at 18.1 percent of local expenditures, was not significantly different from the 
17.8-percent national average.  Households in Miami (19.3 percent) and Atlanta 
(17.4 percent) also allocated shares for transportation that were not 
significantly different from that for the nation.  However, Houston consumer 
units spent a measurably larger share on transportation (20.7 percent).  In 
fact, Houston was the only area with an above-average transportation share 
among the 18 published metropolitan areas nationwide.

     Of the annual $9,662 transportation expenditure in Dallas, 94.6 percent 
was used in buying and maintaining private vehicles, similar to the national 
average of 94.4 percent.  (See table B for expenditure shares and table 2 for 
detailed expenditure levels.)  The average number of vehicles per household in 
Dallas was 2.0, close to the national average of 1.9.  The average number of 
vehicles per household was equal to the U.S. average in Houston (1.9), but 
below the average in Atlanta (1.6) and Miami (1.5).  In the Dallas area, 5.4 
percent of the household transportation budget was spent on public transit, 
which includes fares for taxis, buses, trains, and planes; nationally, the 
average was 5.6 percent.


Table B. Percent distribution of transportation expenditures, United States and
selected metropolitan areas, 2005-2006
================================================================================
                                   United   
            Category               States   Dallas   Atlanta  Houston   Miami
================================================================================
Total transportation                100.0    100.0     100.0    100.0    100.0 
  Vehicle purchases (net outlays)    41.3     40.6      41.4     45.6     39.1 
  Gasoline and motor oil             25.2     24.9      28.0     23.6     25.3 
  Other vehicle expenses             27.9     29.1      25.9     26.4     30.3 
  Public transportation               5.6      5.4       4.8      4.5      5.3 
================================================================================
Note: Columns may not add to 100 due to rounding.


     Payments for personal insurance and pensions averaged $6,573 in Dallas and 
accounted for 12.3 percent of the local household expenditures, significantly 
higher than the 11.0-percent share allocated nationally.  Atlanta, too, had an 
above-average share at 12.8 percent for these types of payments, while 
Houston’s 11.5-percent share was not significantly different from the national 
average.  Consumer units in Miami (9.4 percent) allocated a smaller-than-
average portion of their budget to personal insurance and pensions.

     On an annual basis, Dallas households spent $6,537 on food, which 
accounted for a 12.3-percent share of their expenditures, matching the 
percentage they allocated to personal insurance and pensions.  This percentage 
was not significantly different from the 12.7-percent share for food recorded 
nationally.  Consumer units in Miami (13.3 percent) and Atlanta (12.1 percent) 
also had expenditures shares similar to that of the nation, but households in 
Houston (10.8 percent) spent a significantly smaller portion of their budget on 
food.

     Consumer units in Dallas allocated 54.7 percent of their food dollars on 
food prepared at home and the remaining 45.3 percent on food prepared away from 
home, such as restaurant meals, carry-outs, board at school, and catered meals.  
The expenditure share allocated to food prepared at home was close to the 55.7 
percent average spent by U.S. households.  Among the three other selected 
southern metropolitan areas, Houston (53.3 percent) and Atlanta (47.4 percent) 
allocated a measurably smaller share of their budgets to eating at home while 
residents of Miami (63.7 percent) spent a significantly higher share on food at 
home.  

     Out-of-pocket healthcare expenses—which include health insurance premiums, 
medical services, drugs (prescription and nonprescription), and medical care 
supplies—accounted for 5.8 percent of total household expenditures in both 
Dallas and Houston, not significantly different from the 5.7-percent share 
recorded nationwide.  However, the percentage spent on out-of-pocket health 
care expenses was significantly less than the national average in both Miami 
(5.2 percent) and Atlanta (4.6 percent).

     A typical Dallas area household allocated a significantly lower share (4.3 
percent) of its budget to entertainment expenditures when compared to the 
national average (5.0 percent).  Consumer units in Houston (4.5 percent) and 
Miami (3.6 percent) also spent lower portions of their total budgets on 
entertainment, while those in Atlanta had an expenditure share not 
significantly different from the U.S. average.

     Cash contributions accounted for 3.9 percent of an average consumer unit’s 
spending in Dallas, similar to the national average of 3.7 percent.  This 
category consists of cash contributed to persons or organizations outside the 
consumer unit, including alimony and child support payments; care of students 
away from home; and contributions to religious, educational, charitable, or 
political organizations.  The expenditure share for cash contributions was also 
not significantly different from that for the nation in Houston, but was lower 
than average in Miami (3.1 percent) and Atlanta (2.8 percent).

     Spending on apparel and services accounted for 3.8 percent of total 
expenditures in Dallas, not significantly different from the 4.0-percent 
national average.  Households in Houston (4.6 percent) and Atlanta (4.2 
percent) allocated a similar share of their total budgets for clothing when 
compared to the typical U.S. household, while the expenditure share in Miami 
(2.9 percent) was significantly lower than the U.S. average.

     As noted, the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area is 1 of 18 areas 
nationwide for which Consumer Expenditure data are available.  We encourage 
users interested in learning more about the Consumer Expenditure Survey to 
contact the Southwest Information Office at (214) 767-6970.  Metropolitan area 
CE data and that for the four geographic regions and the United States are 
available on the BLS Web site at http://www.bls.gov/cex/.  This release 
is available in text and PDF format on the Dallas BLS Web site at 
http://www.bls.gov/ro6/ .



                                  Technical Note

     The current Consumer Expenditure Survey (CE) program began in 1980.  Its 
principal objective is to collect information on the buying habits of American 
consumers.  The consumer expenditure data are used in a wide variety of 
research by government, business, labor, and academic analysts.  The data are 
also required for periodic revision of the Consumer Price Index.

     The survey consists of two components, a diary or recordkeeping survey, 
and an interview survey.  The Diary Survey, completed by participating consumer 
units for two consecutive 1-week periods, collects data on frequently-purchased 
smaller items.  The Interview Survey, in which the expenditures of consumer 
units are obtained in five interviews conducted every 3 months, collects data 
for larger-cost items and expenditures that occur on a regular basis.  The U.S. 
Census Bureau collects the survey data.

     Each component of the survey queries an independent sample of consumer 
units which is representative of the U.S. population. Over the year, about 
7,000 consumer units are sampled for the Diary Survey.  The Interview Survey is 
conducted on a rotating panel basis, with about 7,000 consumer units 
participating each quarter.  The data are collected on an ongoing basis in 91 
areas of the country.

     The integrated data from the BLS Diary and Interview Surveys provide a 
complete accounting of consumer expenditures and income, which neither survey 
component alone is designed to do.

     The expenditure data in this release should be interpreted with care. The 
expenditures are averages for consumer units with the specified 
characteristics, regardless of whether or not a specific unit incurred an 
expense for that specific item during the recording period.  The average 
expenditure may be considerably lower than the expenditure by those consumer 
units that purchased the item.  This study is not intended as a comparative 
cost of living survey, as neither the quantity nor the quality of goods and 
services has been held constant among areas.  Differences may result from 
variations in demographic characteristics such as consumer unit size, age, 
preferences, income levels, etc.  Users should keep in mind that prices for 
many goods and services have risen since the survey was conducted. 

     In addition, sample surveys are subject to two types of errors.  Sampling 
errors occur because the data are collected from a representative sample rather 
than the entire population.  Nonsampling errors result from the inability or 
unwillingness of respondents to provide correct information, differences in 
interviewer ability, mistakes in recording or coding, or other processing 
errors.  The year-to-year changes are volatile and should be interpreted 
carefully.  Sample sizes for the metropolitan areas are much smaller than for 
the nation, so the U.S. estimates and year-to-year changes are more reliable 
than those for the metropolitan areas. 

     Some expenditure components are subject to large fluctuations from one 
year to the next because these components include expensive items that 
relatively few consumers purchase each year.  Thus, shifts from year to year in 
the number of consumers making such purchases can have a large effect on 
average expenditures.  Examples of these types of expenses are purchases of new 
cars and trucks in the transportation component, and spending on boats and 
recreational vehicles in the entertainment component.

     The CE significance tests in this release compare expenditure shares for 
the 14 major expenditure categories in the United States to expenditure shares 
in selected metropolitan areas (areas in this release are listed below).  
Expenditure shares for housing and transportation that are above or below that 
for the nation after testing for significance at the 95-percent confidence 
interval are identified in charts 1 and 2 for the 18 metropolitan areas 
surveyed.

     NOTE:  A value that is statistically different from another does not 
necessarily mean that the difference has economic or practical significance.  
Statistical significance is concerned with our ability to make confident 
statements about a universe based on a sample.  It is entirely possible that a 
large difference between two values is not significantly different 
statistically, while a small difference is, since both the size and 
heterogeneity of the sample affect the relative error of the data being tested.

     Metropolitan areas definitions are based on Core-Based Statistical Areas 
defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget.  The metropolitan areas 
and their component counties and cities discussed in this release are:

Atlanta, Ga. -- Barrow, Bartow, Carroll, Cherokee, Clayton, Cobb, Coweta, 
DeKalb, Douglas, Fayette, Forsyth, Fulton, Gwinnett, Henry, Newton, Paulding, 
Pickens, Rockdale, Spalding, and Walton Counties.

Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas -- includes Collin, Dallas, Delta, Denton, Ellis, 
Henderson, Hood, Hunt, Johnson, Kaufman, Parker, Rockwall, Tarrant and Wise 
Counties.

Houston-Galveston-Brazoria, Texas -- includes Brazoria, Chambers, Fort Bend, 
Galveston, Harris, Liberty, Montgomery, San Jacinto and Waller Counties. 

Miami-Fort Lauderdale, Fla. -- includes Broward and Miami Dade Counties.


                                  Definitions

     Consumer unit - members of a household related by blood, marriage, adoption,
or other legal arrangement; a single person living alone or sharing a household 
with others but who is financially independent; or two or more persons living 
together who share responsibility for at least 2 out of 3 major types of 
expenses - food, housing, and other expenses.  The terms household or consumer 
unit are used interchangeably for convenience.

     Expenditures - consist of the transaction costs, including excise and sales 
taxes, of goods and services acquired during the interview or recordkeeping 
period.  Expenditure estimates include expenditures for gifts, but exclude 
purchases or portions of purchases directly assignable to business purposes.  
Also excluded are periodic credit or installment payments on goods or services 
already acquired.  The full cost of each purchase is recorded even though full 
payment may not have been made at the date of purchase.

     Income before taxes - the total money earnings and selected money receipts 
during the 12 months prior to the interview date.

===================================================================================
     (1) See Technical Note for definition of a consumer unit. The terms consumer
unit and household are used interchangeably throughout this text for convenience.
     (2) Statistical significance tests were introduced for metropolitan area
expenditure shares beginning with 2004-2005 data.  See Technical Note for further
discussion of Consumer Expenditure significance testing.
===================================================================================
 




Table 1. Consumer unit characteristics and percent distribution of 
expenditures, U.S. and selected metropolitan statistical areas, Consumer 
Expenditure Survey, 2005-2006
===============================================================================
                                   United   
              Item                 States   Dallas  Atlanta  Houston   Miami
===============================================================================
Consumer unit characteristics:
  Income before taxes             $59,628  $66,261  $64,217  $68,659  $51,232
  Age of reference person            48.7     44.9     46.1     45.7     50.4

Average number in consumer unit:
  Persons                             2.5      2.8      2.5      2.8      2.5
  Children under 18                    .6       .8       .7       .8       .6
  Persons 65 and over                  .3       .2       .2       .2       .4
  Earners                             1.3      1.6      1.3      1.4      1.3
  Vehicles                            1.9      2.0      1.6      1.9      1.5

Percent homeowner                      67       65       69       70       63
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average annual expenditures       $47,421  $53,294  $43,727  $56,260  $42,379
      Percent distribution:         100.0    100.0    100.0    100.0    100.0

Food                                 12.7     12.3     12.1     10.8     13.3

Alcoholic beverages                   1.0       .9       .6      1.1       .6

Housing                              33.3     33.5     37.0     30.6     37.6

Apparel and services                  4.0      3.8      4.2      4.6      2.9

Transportation                       17.8     18.1     17.4     20.7     19.3

Healthcare                            5.7      5.8      4.6      5.8      5.2

Entertainment                         5.0      4.3      4.3      4.5      3.6

Personal care products & services     1.2      1.3      1.1      1.3      1.5

Reading                                .3       .2       .2       .2       .1

Education                             1.9      1.5      1.5      1.8      1.7

Tobacco products & smoking supplies    .7       .5       .4       .5       .4

Miscellaneous                         1.7      1.6      1.2      1.8      1.2

Cash contributions                    3.7      3.9      2.8      4.9      3.1

Personal insurance and pensions      11.0     12.3     12.8     11.5      9.4
===============================================================================
NOTE: Columns may not add to 100 due to rounding.

 


Table 2. Consumer unit characteristics and average annual expenditures,
U.S. and selected metropolitan areas, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2005-2006
==================================================================================
                                       United  
              Item                     States   Dallas  Atlanta  Houston   Miami
==================================================================================
Average annual expenditures           $47,421  $53,294  $43,727  $56,260  $42,379

Food                                    6,022    6,537    5,289    6,063    5,637
  Food at home                          3,357    3,573    2,506    3,231    3,593
    Cereals and bakery products           446      468      323      382      464
    Meats, poultry, fish, & eggs          781      805      661      784      910
    Dairy products                        373      392      234      329      427
    Fruits and vegetables                 572      596      443      587      727
    Other food at home                  1,185    1,312      846    1,149    1,066
  Food away from home                   2,665    2,964    2,783    2,832    2,044

Alcoholic beverages                       462      461      265      604      255

Housing                                15,782   17,854   16,158   17,198   15,928
  Shelter                               9,253    9,883    9,539    9,427   10,053
    Owned dwellings                     6,250    6,793    6,467    6,501    6,385
    Rented dwellings                    2,468    2,478    2,523    2,293    3,445
    Other lodging                         535      611      549      634      222
  Utilities, fuels, & public services   3,291    4,424    3,773    4,179    3,421
  Household operations                    875    1,140      990    1,181      856
  Housekeeping supplies                   625      714      548      732      532
  Household furnishings & equipment     1,737    1,693    1,307    1,679    1,065

Apparel and services                    1,880    2,048    1,847    2,608    1,242
 
Transportation                          8,427    9,662    7,599   11,636    8,186
  Vehicle purchases (net outlay)        3,482    3,919    3,146    5,305    3,199
  Gasoline and motor oil                2,121    2,410    2,124    2,743    2,069
  Other vehicle expenses                2,347    2,816    1,965    3,068    2,480
  Public transportation                   476      517      364      519      437

Healthcare                              2,716    3,075    2,017    3,259    2,190

Entertainment                           2,382    2,285    1,861    2,528    1,523

Personal care products & services         563      713      460      737      633

Reading                                   122      110       72      114       43

Education                                 914      799      652      998      724

Tobacco products & smoking supplies       323      260      190      274      168

Miscellaneous                             827      839      522    1,025      524

Cash contributions                      1,767    2,077    1,207    2,736    1,328

Personal insurance and pensions         5,237    6,573    5,587    6,478    4,000
  Life & other personal insurance         351      382      266      441      221
  Pensions and Social Security          4,886    6,191    5,321    6,038    3,779
==================================================================================
  

 

Last Modified Date: March 6, 2008