Change in Total Personal Income by County and Region 1992-2002
Missouri total personal income, adjusted for inflation, increased by 25.1 percent from 1992 - 2002. Increases occurred in 112 Missouri counties with decline occurring only in Atchison and Holt Counties along with St. Louis City. As shown on Map 1, total personal income increased from 1992 to 2002 by more than 25 percent in 64 counties. As indicated on the map, 28 of the 43 counties gaining less than 20 percent are concentrated in rural north Missouri with an additional eight located in the Bootheel and Southeast Regions.
At the other extreme, there were twelve counties (Map 1) in which total personal income increased by more than 50 percent from 1992-2002. Those counties are generally located in areas of high population growth including three counties in suburban St. Louis (St. Charles, Lincoln and Warren), four counties in the Springfield-Branson area (Christian, Taney, Stone and Dallas) and two counties in the Lake of Ozarks area (Camden,and Benton). In addition total personal income increased from 1992-2002 by 52 percent in Cass County, 55 percent in Crawford County and 59 percent in McDonald County.
Major Components of Total Personal Income and Change From 1992-2002
Table 1 shows the amount of each of five major components of Missouri's total personal income in 1992 and in 2002. Personal income means income received by individuals and families. It does not include the income of corporations, for example.
The table shows that the most significant contribution to total personal income is "Wages and Salaries." That income received by employees accounted for 56.2 percent of state total personal income in 1992 and a slightly greater 56.9 percent of the total in 2001.
By category, the second largest contribution to total personal income was, in both 1992 and 2002, income earned as "Dividends, Interest and Rent." That source accounted for 20.4 percent of state total personal income in 1992 and 17.9 percent of the state total in 2002.
The third largest component of total personal income is "Transfer Payments", which includes that income received from government sources by those persons entitled because of age, financial need, retirement, etc. In Missouri about 83 percent of total transfer payments are either retirement (Social Security) or health care (Medicare, Medicaid). Transfer Payments accounted for 14.6 percent of state total personal income in 1992 and increased to 16.3 percent of state total by 2002.
The component of total personal income labeled "Proprietors Income" (those that derive their income from their own business) although a relatively smaller contributor to total personal income than the above three components, increased from $9.3 billion in 1991 to $12.3 billion in 2002. To some degree this reflects the growing importance of small business to the state's economy.
As shown in the table, farm earnings made a relatively small contribution to the state's total personal income in both 1992 and 2002. Although farm income is a relative small contributor to state total income, the amount of farm income can vary significantly from one year to another.
Distribution of Total Personal Income in 2002
Table 2 shows total personal income for each county in both 1992 and 2002. There were 20 counties in which total county personal income exceeded a billion dollars in 2002. Those are generally the counties having the largest population. The largest total was St. Louis County with total personal income of $41.8 billion, which was 25.8 percent of Missouri's total personal income in 2002. Other large income counties in order were: Jackson, ($20.3 billion), St. Louis City, ($9.2 billion), St. Charles ($9.2 billion), Greene, ($6.8 billion), Clay ($6.0 billion), and Jefferson ($5.2 billion). Together those seven counties had total personal income in 2002 of $98.5 billion - 61.0 percent of Missouri's $161.7 billion total. For comparison, those seven counties had total personal income of $81.1 billion that was 62.8 percent of the 1992 state total. This comparison shows that Missouri's total personal income became somewhat less concentrated in the largest counties from 1992 to 2002.
Map 2 shows that in 2002 there were 27 counties whose total personal income was less than $200 million. In five of those counties total income was less than $100 million. An additional 41 counties had a total personal income of between $200 and $500 million in 2002. The total personal income of 27 counties was between $500 million and $1 billion and in the remaining 20 counties total personal income exceeded $1 billion.
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OSEDA Regional Grouping of Counties Many demographic factors vary by region within the state of Missouri. For the convenience of our user community, OSEDA prepares tables using three different regional groupings of counties: Extension, Economic Development and Transportation. For each of these groupings, one table summarizes the indicators by regional total and a second table shows values for each county grouped by region. Users may select the county grouping most helpful for their application and understanding. |
Regional Comparisons of Total Personal Income 1992-2002
University of Missouri Extension Regions
Table 3 reports total personal income by University of Missouri Extension Regions in 1992 and 2002. Because of very large differences in population among the regions there is a correspondingly large difference in total personal income. By far the greatest personal income in 2002 was in the East Central Region with $71.79 billion. Although the West Central Region's total personal income of $35.40 billion was second largest among the regions, it was less than half the amount of the East Central Region. There was a similar difference with regard to the Southwest Region. Total personal income in Southwest was third largest with $17.83 billion. That regional total was less than half of West Central. Central Region was fourth largest at $11.46 billion.
Although East Central had by far the greatest total personal income among the regions, the rate of increase from 1992 to 2002 was 21.7 percent, which was below the 25.1 percent increase of the state. Half the regions, East Central, Northeast, Northwest and Southeast, each had a rate of increase in total personal income well below the statewide rate. Population increase and economic growth have been closely linked in Missouri during the past decade. Therefore, it is not surprising that the greatest relative increase in total personal income (36.5 percent) was in the Southwest Region - the region that also had the greatest rate of population increase among the regions from 1992-2002. For those same reasons increase in total personal income from 1992 to 2002 was next greatest in South Central and Central regions having increases of 34.4 and 30.9 percent respectively.
Missouri Department of Economic Development Regions
Since there are 13 Missouri Department of Economic Development (DED) regions most have a smaller number of counties than the eight Extension regions. This is reflected in the total personal income reported by DED regions in Table 4. The table shows that while four of the DED regions - St. Louis MSA, Kansas City MSA, Springfield-Branson and Central had a combined total personal income of $124.01 billion in 2002 (77 percent of Missouri's total), that leaves the remaining $38 billion to be divided among nine regions. As shown in the table none of the remaining nine regions had total personal income in 2002 of greater than $6.8 billion. Especially small were the North Central and South Central Regions each having an aggregate personal income of less than $2.2 billion.
During the past decade there has been a clear linkage between population and economic growth in Missouri. Among the thirteen DED regions there is a very close correlation between change in region population and change in total personal income. Particularly important has been the extent to which migration contributed to population growth. There were seven DED regions whose total personal income increased by more than 30 percent from 1992 to 2002. The greatest percentage increase among those regions was the 38.7 percent increase in the Springfield-Branson region followed by a 37.1 percent increase in the Lake Ozarks-Rolla region. Both had significant population growth from 1992-2002.
At the other extreme, total personal income increased by 20 percent or less in four of the 13 regions. Those four regions are the Bootheel, Northwest, Northeast and North Central. Together those four regions had an increase in total personal income of only $1.90 billion - only about 6 percent of the state total.
Missouri Department of Transportation Districts
Table 5 shows the extent of change in total personal income for each of the ten MODOT districts. As reported above more than half of Missouri counties (64) had an increase in total adjusted personal income of greater than 25 percent from 1992 to 2002.
Change in the total personal income among the ten districts is closely related to the extent of population change in each district. The Districts with relatively little population growth also had relatively little growth in total personal income. Although the counties included in the St. Louis District had total personal income of $67.86 billion (42.0 percent of state total) in 2002, the rate of district increase (20.7 percent) was well below the statewide increase of 25.1 percent. The rate of increase was much lower in the Macon (North Central) District and the St. Joseph District (Northwest) in which total personal income increased by 13.0 and 17.9 percent respectively.
Among the ten MODOT Districts the greatest rate of population growth during the 1990s occurred in the Springfield and Jefferson City Districts and, correspondingly, total personal income in those regions increased by 38.0 and 36.1 percent respectively. In three other MODOT Districts, Joplin, Kansas City and Willow Springs total personal income increased by amounts above the state average with increases of 31.8, 32.1 and 26.7 percent respectively.
Missouri Regional Planning Commission Areas
As shown in Table 6 there are 19 Missouri Regional Planning Commission Areas. Some of these are known as Regional Planning Commission Areas (RPCs), while some are known as Regional Councils of Government (COGs). These regions range from as few as three counties in the Boonslick RPC (within St. Louis metro area) to as many as 11 counties in the Green Hills RPC in North Central Missouri. Considering the size variation among these 19 regions, there is significant variation in amount and rate of change in regional total personal income between 1992 and 2002.
Among the RPCs, the greatest total personal income in 2002 was in the East-West Gateway Coordinating Council with an income of $67.86 billion in 2002. That Council covers the five counties which form the core of the St. Louis metro area - St. Louis City, St. Louis County, and St. Charles, Franklin and Jefferson Counties. The $67.86 billion total personal income of that region accounts for 42 percent of the Missouri total. The second greatest total personal income was in the Mid-America RPC (Jackson, Cass, Clay, Platte and Ray Counties) with $31.84 billion in 2002 - 19.7 percent of Missouri total. The third highest total personal income was $12.95 billion in the 10 county Southwest Missouri Council of Governments including Springfield and nine other surrounding counties. Together, those three RPCs account for 69.7 percent of Missouri total personal income.
Following the three most populated RPCs and their 70 percent of Missouri total personal income, the remaining 16 RPC regions are comparatively uniform in amount of personal income per region. With the exception of the Mid-Missouri RPC with a total personal income of $7.9 billion in 2002, there was no other RPC with personal income in excess of $4.5 billion.
With the exception of the five county NWMO Regional Council of Governments with a total personal income of $885 million, the remaining 14 RPCs each had a regional total personal income of between $1.14 and $4.52 billion in 2002.
The greatest percentage increase in total personal income between 1992 and 2002 occurred in the Boonslick RPC with an increase of 48.7 percent followed by the 10 county Southwest Missouri Council of Government with an increase of 38.2 percent. Both had significant population increase during the past decade - a major contributor to total income growth. The smallest increases occurred among the four RPCs covering most of rural north Missouri. In none of those four RPCs (Green Hills, NWMO, Mark Twain and Northeast) did the increase in total personal income between 1992 and 2002 exceed 18.0 percent.
| Detailed Tables of Total Personal Income in Missouri | ||
The following links provide detailed tables of Total Personal Income in Missouri, 1992-2002. They are available in both HTML and Adobe Acrobat(PDF) formats. Missouri Summary |
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| Major Components of Total Personal Income, Missouri: 1992-2002 | GIF | All Missouri Counties |
| Missouri Total Personal Income, 1992-2002 - By County with State Totals | HTML | |
| Regional Tables | ||
| UO/E Regions | ||
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Missouri Total Personal Income, 1992-2002 - By UM Extension Region |
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| Missouri Total Personal Income, 1992-2002 - By County Within UM Extension Region | HTML | |
| DED Regions | ||
| Missouri Total Personal Income, 1992-2002 - By DED Region | HTML | |
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Missouri Total Personal Income, 1992-2002 - By County Within DED Region |
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| MoDOT Regions | ||
| Missouri Total Personal Income, 1992-2002 - By DOT District | HTML | |
| Missouri Total Personal Income, 1992-2002 - By County Within DOT District | HTML | |
| RPC Regions | ||
| Missouri Total Personal Income, 1992-2002 - By RPC | HTML | |
| Missouri Total Personal Income, 1992-2002 - By County Within RPC | HTML | |
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