Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF)

Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF)

The 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) is the most recent survey conducted. Below are links to the bulletin article, interactive chartbook, historical bulletin tables, full public dataset, extract dataset, replicate weight files, and documentation.

How to get a notification of changes: If you would like to receive notification about additions to the web page and updates to these surveys, please sign our guest book.

How to send a comment or question: To send a comment about the SCF website or to make technical inquiries about the SCF, please fill out our feedback form. To ensure that your question is properly routed, please select the Survey of Consumer Finances as the “Economic Data” and select no other options above the field labeled “Type your message.”

Tags: , ,

179 Reasons You Probably Don’t Need to Panic About Inflation

relatório dinâmico com gráficos alto \ baixo

By Josh Bivens and Stuart A. ThompsonAug. 18, 2021Gasoline (all types)March 2019March 2020March 2021Used cars and trucksMarch 2019March 2020March 2021Airline faresMarch 2019March 2020March 2021

Here’s how the price of gasoline changed each month throughout 2019, compared with the previous year. ↑ Red means the price went higher, while ↓ blue means it fell.

The coronavirus gripped the United States by March 2020. The economy halted. Gas prices ↓ plummeted.

This year, things have taken another turn. Gasoline prices have increased sharply, ↑ up 41.8% by July compared with a year earlier.

It’s a similar story for used cars and trucks, with prices ↓ falling during the pandemic shutdown, then ↑ soaring as things reopened.

Tags: , , ,