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St. Louis Fed's Bullard Discusses Living Standards
across U.S. Metro Areas
April 13, 2018
ST. LOUIS – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard discussed “Living
Standards across U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Areas” on Friday at a Calhoun Lecture Series
event at Washington University in St. Louis.
In comparing living standards across metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs), he drew on
recent research at the St. Louis Fed as well as additional research from outside the St. Louis
Fed. He said that the motivation for his talk is the literature on international standards of
living, which tries to determine which countries are performing relatively well and which
are performing less well for their citizens, as well as what makes some countries relatively
well-off in terms of material well-being and what makes others relatively poor.
He explained that this literature typically uses real per capita income (i.e., total real income
produced in the economy divided by the population) as the measure of “standard of living.”
Based on this measure, he noted that the U.S. standard of living is relatively high, while the
standard of living in many other countries is lower. He also pointed out that countries with a
high standard of living are not necessarily the fastest-growing countries.
For this talk, Bullard applied this international framework to MSAs in the U.S. However, he
noted that prices can vary greatly across the country, in part due to differences in housing
costs. “Adjusting for price differences across MSAs is essential for generating meaningful
comparisons of living standards across MSAs,” he said.

Price Levels by MSA
“We all have an intuitive sense that some places are expensive locations to live and other
places are inexpensive,” Bullard said. “In recent years, more systematic data have been
developed that account for these differences in prices across the country.”
Bullard explained that these regional price level data—called Regional Price Parities (RPPs)
—measure the differences across MSAs for a given year. RPPs, which are published by the
Bureau of Economic Analysis, are expressed as a percentage of the national price level.

Among the 381 MSAs that Bullard examined, 59 MSAs were more expensive than the nation
at large (meaning their RPPs were larger than 100 percent) in 2015. The median and
average (population weighted) RPPs were 93 percent and 101.7 percent, respectively. St.
Louis had an RPP of 90.6 percent.

Real Income Per Capita across MSAs
Next, Bullard discussed adjusting real income per capita for each MSA based on the
regional level of prices for that MSA. “This type of calculation gives the standard of living as
the average level of real income per person for a particular location, analogous to the crosscountry literature,” he said.
Speci�cally, he used per capita personal income in 2009 chained dollars for each MSA,
divided by the MSA’s RPP. Based on this measure, he noted that in 2015 St. Louis ranked No.
20 out of the 381 MSAs, which is within the top 6 percent. “Said differently, 94 percent of all
MSAs across the nation have a lower standard of living than St. Louis,” he said, adding,
“Among the complete set of MSAs, the larger MSAs tend to rank higher overall.”
He also examined the 53 MSAs with a population of at least 1 million, which he referred to
as the large MSAs. Among this group in 2015, St. Louis ranked No. 7 in RPP-adjusted real
per capita personal income.
Of the top 10 large MSAs in terms of RPP-adjusted real per capita personal income, Bullard
pointed out that some have a high cost of living while others have a low cost of living. “Just
two cities in the top 10, St. Louis and Nashville, have a cost of living less than the national
average,” he said.
When considering living standards across MSAs, there is also the question of income
inequality within an MSA. “High average income values could be in�uenced by some
households with extremely high income,” Bullard said.
Although the per capita concept he used doesn’t account for income distribution within an
MSA, he drew on other research that has studied income inequality across MSAs. According
to this research, he said, the St. Louis MSA’s income inequality is near the average, but some
other top 10 MSAs in real per capita income have higher-than-average income inequality.1
He gave a key takeaway from the analysis in his talk: “Among the top 10 large MSAs, only St.
Louis and Nashville can simultaneously claim a higher-than-average standard of living, a
lower-than-average cost of living and moderate income inequality.”
Bullard concluded by reiterating the importance of adjusting for price differences in
comparing living standards across MSAs. In addition, he said, “The facts uncovered through

this analysis may provide the basis for future research on why some cities are more
successful than others.”

1 Inequality is measured by the ratio of the average household income of the top 1 percent

to the average household income of the bottom 99 percent.