Federal Reserve Economic Data

Table Data - 90% Confidence Interval Upper Bound of Estimate of Median Household Income for St. Louis City, MO

Title 90% Confidence Interval Upper Bound of Estimate of Median Household Income for St. Louis City, MO
Series ID MHICIUBMO29510A052NCEN
Source U.S. Census Bureau
Release Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates
Seasonal Adjustment Not Seasonally Adjusted
Frequency Annual
Units Dollars
Date Range 1989-01-01 to 2023-01-01
Last Updated 2024-12-20 2:02 AM CST
Notes The U.S. Census Bureau provides annual estimates of income and poverty statistics for all school districts, counties, and states through the Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates (SAIPE) program. The bureau's main objective with this program is to provide estimates of income and poverty for the administration of federal programs and the allocation of federal funds to local jurisdictions. In addition to these federal programs, state and local programs use the income and poverty estimates for distributing funds and managing programs.

Household income includes income of the householder and all other people 15 years and older in the household, whether or not they are related to the householder. Median is the point that divides the household income distributions into two halves: one-half with income above the median and the other with income below the median. The median is based on the income distribution of all households, including those with no income.

A confidence interval is a range of values, from the lower bound to the respective upper bound, that describes the uncertainty surrounding an estimate. A confidence interval is also itself an estimate. It is made using a model of how sampling, interviewing, measuring, and modeling contribute to uncertainty about the relation between the true value of the quantity we are estimating and our estimate of that value. The "90%" in the confidence interval listed above represents a level of certainty about our estimate. If we were to repeatedly make new estimates using exactly the same procedure (by drawing a new sample, conducting new interviews, calculating new estimates and new confidence intervals), the confidence intervals would contain the average of all the estimates 90% of the time. For more details about the confidence intervals and their interpretation, see this explanation.
DATE VALUE
1989-01-01 20432
1990-01-01 .
1991-01-01 .
1992-01-01 .
1993-01-01 23570
1994-01-01 .
1995-01-01 26509
1996-01-01 .
1997-01-01 29233
1998-01-01 30193
1999-01-01 28752
2000-01-01 30807
2001-01-01 29784
2002-01-01 29666
2003-01-01 29969
2004-01-01 29848
2005-01-01 31755
2006-01-01 32234
2007-01-01 35270
2008-01-01 35740
2009-01-01 35777
2010-01-01 34025
2011-01-01 34040
2012-01-01 33182
2013-01-01 35832
2014-01-01 37248
2015-01-01 39475
2016-01-01 41293
2017-01-01 42768
2018-01-01 45198
2019-01-01 48679
2020-01-01 49018
2021-01-01 51420
2022-01-01 54802
2023-01-01 58400

Subscribe to the FRED newsletter


Follow us

Back to Top