For release: Thursday, December 2, 2010
BLSInfoChicago@bls.gov
General Information: (312) 353-1880
Media Contact: (312) 353-1138




CONSUMER EXPENDITURES FOR THE MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL AREA: 2008-09


Consumer units1 in the Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.-Wis., metropolitan area spent an average of $56,340 per year in 2008-09, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Regional Commissioner Charlene Peiffer noted that this figure was 13 percent higher than the $49,778 average expenditure level for a typical household in the United States. Although households in the Minneapolis area spent more than the U.S. average, they allocated their dollars similarly among the eight major categories which represented 94 percent of household spending in the Minneapolis area, with only two differing significantly. For example, expenditures for personal insurance and pensions, which comprised 12.4 percent of a typical household’s budget in the Minneapolis area, were significantly larger than the nationwide average of 11.1 percent. (See chart 1.)

Chart 1. Percent distribution of average annual expenditures for eight major categories in the United States and Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area, 2008-09


Housing in the Minneapolis metropolitan area averaged $19,164 annually and was the largest expenditure category, accounting for 34.0 percent of a Minneapolis area household’s total budget. (See tables 1 and 2.) This share was not significantly different from the 34.2-percent national average. Overall, 10 of the 18 published metropolitan areas had expenditure shares for housing measurably above the U.S. average; only Houston had a lower-than-average share. (See chart 2.) Housing expenditures ranged from 41.3 percent in San Diego to 31.9 percent in Houston among the 18 areas. (See table 3.)

The majority of housing expenditures in Minneapolis went toward shelter, 61.8 percent, which includes mortgage interest, property taxes, repairs, and rent, among other items; nationwide, 59.6 percent of the housing budget was allocated for shelter. (See table A.) Utilities, fuels, and public services expenses accounted for 18.3 percent of the housing budget locally; nationally, it made up 21.5 percent. The rate of homeownership in Minneapolis was 71 percent, while the U.S. average was 66 percent.

Table A. Percent distribution of housing expenditures, United States and Minneapolis-St. Paul, 2008-09
Category United States Minneapolis-St. Paul

Total housing

100.0 100.0

Shelter

59.6 61.8

Utilities, fuels, and public services

21.5 18.3

Household operations

5.9 5.0

Housekeeping supplies

3.9 3.8

Household furnishings and equipment

9.2 11.0

Note: Columns may not add to 100 due to rounding.

At 15.7 percent of the total budget, transportation was the second-largest expenditure category in the Minneapolis area; this was not significantly different from the national average of 16.3 percent. Among the 18 metropolitan areas nationwide, only Detroit (19.2 percent) had an above-average transportation share. (See chart 3.)

Of the $8,833 in annual expenditures for transportation in Minneapolis, 93.2 percent was spent buying and maintaining private vehicles, compared to the national average of 93.9 percent. The remaining 6.8 percent of a Minneapolis household’s transportation budget was spent on public transit, which includes fares for taxis, buses, trains, and planes. Nationally, 6.1 percent of transportation expenditures went to public transit. (See table B.) Among the 18 metropolitan areas, shares of the transportation budget for public transit ranged from 13.6 percent in San Francisco to 3.9 percent in Detroit. The average number of vehicles per household in Minneapolis was 2.3 while the national average was 2.0.

Table B. Percent distribution of transportation expenditures, United States and Minneapolis-St. Paul, 2008-09
Category United States Minneapolis-St. Paul

Transportation

100.0 100.0

Vehicle purchases (net outlays)

33.3 33.0

Gasoline and motor oil

28.9 26.6

Other vehicle expenses

31.7 33.7

Public transportation

6.1 6.8

Note: Columns may not add to 100 due to rounding.

The portion of a Minneapolis consumer unit’s budget spent on food, 12.2 percent, was not significantly different from the 12.9-percent U.S. average. Among the 18 metropolitan areas, 10 had food expenditure shares that were not measurably different from the nationwide average. Boston was the only area with an expenditure share (13.8 percent) for food significantly above that for the nation.

Households in Minneapolis spent $3,942, or 57.2 percent, of their food dollars on food at home and the remaining 42.8 percent on food away from home, such as restaurant meals, carry-out, board at school, and catered affairs. In comparison, the typical U.S. household spent 58.5 percent of its food budget on food at home and 41.5 percent on food away from home.

As noted, Minneapolis is 1 of 18 metropolitan areas nationwide for which Consumer Expenditure Survey (CE) data are available. We encourage users interested in learning more about the CE to contact the Midwest Information Office at (312) 353-1880. Metropolitan area CE data and that for the four geographic regions and the United States are available on our Web site at http://www.bls.gov/ro5/.

Footnotes

1 See the Additional Information for the definition of a consumer unit. The terms consumer unit and household are used interchangeably throughout the text for convenience.


Additional Information

Data contained in this report are from the Consumer Expenditure Survey, which is collected on an ongoing basis by the U.S. Census Bureau for the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The CE data were averaged over a two-year period, 2008 and 2009 and are available for the nation, the 4 geographic regions of the country, and 18 metropolitan areas. The metropolitan area discussed in this release is Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.-Wis., which is comprised of Anoka, Benton, Carver, Chisago, Dakota, Hennepin, Isanti, Ramsey, Scott, Sherburne, Stearns, Washington, and Wright Counties in Minnesota; and Pierce and St. Croix Counties in Wisconsin.

The survey consists of two components, a diary or recordkeeping survey, and an interview survey. 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. Due to changes in the survey sample frame, metropolitan area data in this release are not directly comparable to those prior to 1996.

A consumer unit is defined as 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.

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 a specific unit incurred an expense for that 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. 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. Users should also keep in mind that prices for many goods and services have risen since the survey was conducted.

The CE significance tests in this release compare expenditure shares for selected expenditure categories in the United States to expenditure shares in selected metropolitan areas. (See table 3.) 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 also identified in charts 2 and 3 for the 18 metropolitan areas surveyed. 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.

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.


Table 1. Percent distribution of average annual expenditures, United States and Minneapolis-St. Paul, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2008-09
Category United States Minneapolis-St. Paul

Average annual expenditures

$49,778 $56,340

Percent distribution:

100.0 100.0

Food

12.9 12.2

Alcoholic beverages

0.9 *1.2

Housing

34.2 34.0

Apparel and services

3.5 3.3

Transportation

16.3 15.7

Health care

6.1 5.9

Entertainment

5.6 5.7

Personal care products and services

1.2 1.3

Reading

0.2 0.2

Education

2.1 *1.5

Tobacco products and smoking supplies

0.7 0.6

Miscellaneous

1.7 1.5

Cash contributions

3.5 *4.5

Personal insurance and pensions

11.1 *12.4

* Statistically significant difference from the U.S. average at the 95-percent confidence level.
Note: Numbers may not add to 100 due to rounding.


Table 2. Consumer unit characteristics and average annual expenditures, United States and Minneapolis-St. Paul, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2008-09
Category United States Minneapolis-St. Paul
Consumer unit characteristics:

Income before taxes

$63,209 $73,696

Age of reference person

49.2 46.7
Average number in consumer unit:

Persons

2.5 2.3

Children under 18

0.6 0.5

Persons 65 and over

0.3 0.2

Earners

1.3 1.4

Vehicles

2.0 2.3

Percent homeowners

66 71
Average annual expenditures:

Average annual expenditures

$49,778 $56,340

Food

6,407 6,887

Food at home

3,749 3,942

Cereals and bakery products

507 518

Meats, poultry, fish, and eggs

844 809

Dairy products

418 489

Fruits and vegetables

657 666

Other food at home

1,324 1,461

Food away from home

2,658 2,945

Alcoholic beverages

439 683

Housing

17,002 19,164

Shelter

10,129 11,852

Owned dwellings

6,651 8,555

Rented dwellings

2,792 2,557

Other lodging

685 740

Utilities, fuels, and public services

3,647 3,513

Household operations

1,004 965

Housekeeping supplies

657 730

Household furnishings and equipment

1,565 2,104

Apparel and services

1,763 1,864

Transportation

8,133 8,833

Vehicle purchases (net outlay)

2,706 2,911

Gasoline and motor oil

2,351 2,350

Other vehicle expenses

2,580 2,973

Public transportation

496 598

Healthcare

3,051 3,314

Entertainment

2,764 3,217

Personal care products and services

606 733

Reading

113 128

Education

1,057 871

Tobacco products and smoking supplies

348 328

Miscellaneous

828 832

Cash contributions

1,730 2,518

Personal insurance and pensions

5,538 6,969

Life and other personal insurance

313 333

Pensions and Social Security

5,225 6,636

Table 3. Percent share of average annual expenditures for housing, transportation, and food, United States and 18 metropolitan areas, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2008-09
Area Housing Transportation Food

United States

34.2 16.3 12.9

Atlanta

*37.2 *14.7 *11.7

Baltimore

*39.6 *12.6 *11.3

Boston

35.1 *14.5 *13.8

Chicago

*36.2 15.5 12.4

Cleveland

33.8 15.3 12.5

Dallas

33.8 16.1 12.5

Detroit

33.1 *19.2 13.0

Houston

*31.9 18.3 *11.9

Los Angeles

*38.6 15.5 13.3

Miami

*39.9 17.7 12.2

Minneapolis

34.0 15.7 12.2

New York

*39.2 *14.1 *12.3

Philadelphia

*37.2 *14.4 *11.4

Phoenix

34.9 17.4 11.9

San Diego

*41.3 *13.3 12.2

San Francisco

*38.5 *14.1 *11.7

Seattle

33.4 *14.2 12.2

Washington

*37.1 *13.8 *11.3

* Statistically significant difference from the U.S. average at the 95-percent confidence level.


Chart 2. Expenditure shares spent on housing in 18 metropolitan statistical areas compared to the U.S. average, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2008-09

Chart 2. Expenditure shares spent on housing in 18 metropolitan statistical areas compared to the U.S. average, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2008-09

Note: Statistical significance testing at the 95-percent confidence interval.


Chart 3. Expenditure shares spent on transportation in 18 metropolitan statistical areas compared to the U.S. average, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2008-09

Chart 3. Expenditure shares spent on transportation in 18 metropolitan statistical areas compared to the U.S. average, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2008-09

Note: Statistical significance testing at the 95-percent confidence interval.


 

 

Last Modified Date: December 2, 2010