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  • 2012-04-25 (xsd:date)
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  • Sheila Oliver says the average family income in New Jersey is $57,000 (en)
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  • Democrats in Trenton scoffed when Gov. Chris Christie unveiled a proposal to cut income taxes by 10 percent, saying property taxes are more of a burden for New Jersey residents. Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver (D-Essex) reiterated that point during a recent radio interview. In New Jersey our constituents want to see the Legislature and the governor focus on cutting the property taxes. The average New Jerseyan pays close to $8,000 a year and that is just average, Oliver told Steve Adubato Jr. on WOR-AM on April 19. The proposal to cut income taxes by 10 percent, if you took a family with an average income of $50,000 -- which, by the way, $57,000 is the mean in our state -- that would provide $80 over a three-year period in the pockets of a New Jersey family. That is not anything of significance. We say that won't buy a bag of groceries for a working-class family, Oliver said. We previously checked a statement about potential savings from the governor’s income tax cut proposal. It’s true a couple with a taxable income of $50,000 would pay about $80 less in income taxes under Christie’s plan. But is Oliver right that the average family in New Jersey lives on $57,000 a year? We should note that economists generally prefer median income to mean income, since the mean income can be skewed by extremes, such as very high-income earners. Robert Bernstein, a spokesman for the U.S. Census Bureau, said since the mean can be distorted it's not a good reflection of the situation there. Median is better. The median income is the amount in the middle when a series of numbers are ordered smallest to largest. By either measure, Oliver is wrong. The mean family income in New Jersey was $106,125 in 2010, according to the most recent data available from the American Community Survey, a yearly national assessment conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau. The median family income, according to the same survey, was $82,427. Tom Hester Jr., a spokesman for the Assembly Democrats, told us Oliver meant to refer to the annual average wage in New Jersey, not the average family income. There’s a significant difference between the two. The annual average wage is calculated by determining the total amount of wages paid out in a year and dividing by all the workers covered by the state’s unemployment insurance system who got a paycheck. The figure is based on workers employed at New Jersey companies, those workers may or may not be New Jersey residents, Brian Murray, a spokesman for the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development, said in an e-mail. According to a state labor department report released in 2011, the annual average wage in New Jersey was $56,385 in 2010. Our ruling Oliver said, $57,000 is the mean [income] in our state for a family. That’s not true. The mean family income in New Jersey in 2010 was $106,125 and the median income, a measure less influenced by very high-income earners, was $82,427. We rate Oliver’s statement False. To comment on this story, go to NJ.com . (en)
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