What income around the world looks like (2024)

(Image credit:

Luc Forsyth/Dollar Street

)

What income around the world looks like (1)

By Bryan Lufkin

19th February 2018

What do 30,000 photos of 300 families from 50 countries – organised by income – look like? This website will show you.

What income around the world looks like (2)

(Credit: Moa Karlberg/Dollar Street)

What’s your monthly income? What kind of house do you live in? You may think you know where you fall on the grand global scale of wealth – but an online, open-source gallery of 30,000 intimate photos of families in their homes across the world may change that view of yourself.

Anna Rosling Rönnlund is a former Google UX designer and a co-founder of Gapminder, a Swedish non-profit eductation organisation. Last year, she created a tool called Dollar Street – an online collection of photos that places more than 300 families from 50 countries on a figurative “street”. Lower income families are placed at one end, wealthier families are at the other.

The goal? To give readers a sense of how other people from other cultures live, beyond how their countries are typically represented in news media images – as well as a sense as how you fit into the spectrum of wealth.

Searchable photo albums

The Dollar Street platform allows to search by country, income level, and specific objects. “It’s such a concrete thing,” Rönnlund says of the photo database. “If you’re in a classroom, looking at different kids’ toys will give a clue into their lives.”

Rönnlund hopes these intimate portraits into everyday household life will correct preconceived notions of how people in different countries live. One of the main aims for the project is to show that big challenges for families worldwide, like access to clean water, boil down to individual income, not nationality.

What income around the world looks like (4)

(Credit: Zoriah Miller/Dollar Street )

Prized possessions

“We asked families for their most valuable things. On the poor ends of the street, it’s usually a plastic bucket or something because that is the difference between life and death. In the middle, it’s a sewing machine, or phone, or bike – something that improves speed or makes your life more productive. On the rich end, it’s a wedding photo or bottle of rum or toy. Our basic needs are fulfilled, so we start thinking about special things.”
- Anna Rosling Rönnlund

What income around the world looks like (5)

(Credit: Zoriah Miller/Dollar Street)

Making do with very little

The way Dollar Street classifies objects can provide a fascinating insight into how different families live. In poor families, single objects are more likely to have multiple uses – a single plastic chair could be tagged as “sofa” and “armchair”, for example, whereas a wealthy family would have one of each.

A striking example of this is “toothpaste”. In the village of Akaniaka in Malawi, Nampedi Wizilamu scrapes mud off the sides of her wall and mixes it with water to brush her teeth. Dollar Street, in this instance, groups both “toothpaste” and “wall” under the same label.

What income around the world looks like (6)

(Credit: Zoriah Miller/Dollar Street)

One country, countless situations

A common theme among the photos is that wealth can vary widely in the same country. Rönnlund compares two American families, and finds a surprising wealth indicator: cutlery drawers. The family that makes nearly $5,000 a month has a compartmentalised tray in the drawer that separates steel utensils by type, but a family making around $600 a month in the US, stores a mix of utensils (some plastic) in a plastic tub.

What income around the world looks like (7)

(Credit: Steve Hester and Ron Peaco*ck/Dollar Street)

Unexpected luxuries

Items that many might consider mundane household objects, such as bookcases or books, are surprising signifiers of wealth in this context. Reading for pleasure for instance, requires plentiful free time and a certain education level. Other examples highlighted by the project include beverages like fizzy drinks and alcohol; and integrated door locks that require a key, as opposed to a padlock or a chain link that ties a swinging door to a wooden pole.

What income around the world looks like (8)

(Credit: Zoriah Miller and Jonathan Taylor/Dollar Street)

Scale of slumber

In poorer homes, shelter that shields from the elements is prioritised over a bed to sleep on. Whereas rich families own bedframes that cradle mattresses covered in pillows, sheets and duvets often made from synthetic materials in factories and are colourful and pleasant to look at. Poorer families might sleep on the floor, resulting in a rough night’s sleep – studies show that poverty is often linked to a lack of sleep.

What income around the world looks like (9)

(Credit: Dollar Street)

Mealtime vignettes

Food provides a key view into a family’s income, regardless of the country they live in. Poorer families, which can spend 80% of their income on food, rely on cheap staples that they can buy locally and don’t have to refrigerate, like cornmeal.

But richer families can afford expensive perishables like meat. They also buy produce imported from around the world that can be eaten at any time regardless of season. They prepare so much, and can be so particular about what they eat, that they end up with leftovers.

What income around the world looks like (10)

(Credit: Zoriah Miller/Dollar Street)

Day-to-day beauty

“I’ve always been fascinated by everyday life. When people are selling [and showing] their homes, and they happen to have forgotten to hide something personal – I’m obsessed with that.”
- Anna Rosling Rönnlund

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What income around the world looks like (2024)

FAQs

What is the 1% worldwide income? ›

Anyone with an annual income of above $34 000 are part of the global top one percentage. That is a very large percentage of the US population, as well as almost everyone in certain Northern European countries.

What is the world's average income? ›

As the world's economy has continued to grow over the past decades, so have wages and salaries, with the global net national income per capita reaching 8,700 U.S. dollars in 2020. Particularly the economic growth in emerging economies such as China and India have contributed to this development.

Which country has the highest income in the world? ›

The worldwide highest income is earned in Monaco. The smallest budget per capita exists in Afghanistan. In our comparison over 94 countries, the USA comes 7th with an average income of 76,770 USD.

What are the 4 levels of global income? ›

The World Bank assigns the world's economies to four income groups—low, lower-middle, upper-middle, and high income. The classifications are updated each year on July 1 and are based on the GNI per capita of the previous year (2021).

How much wealth do you need to join the richest 1% around the world? ›

The 1% Club
CountriesRegionWealth (USD)
🇺🇸 U.S.N. America$5,813,000
🇸🇬 SingaporeAsia$5,227,000
🇸🇪 SwedenEurope$4,761,000
🇦🇺 AustraliaOceania$4,673,000
13 more rows
Mar 6, 2024

Who is in the 1%? ›

The income of those in the top 1% is many multiples above that of the average American. According to a Congressional Budget Office report, you need at least $652,657 in income per year to make the top 1%, but this varies by where you live.

Is 200k a good salary in the US? ›

It's not a great income (like the top 10% or higher), but it's also better than the median income. It is a good income. If you accept my definition, then a good household income would be $130,000 per year (in 2022) and a good individual income would be $82,000 per year (in 2022).

What is a good salary in the US? ›

A Smart Asset report based on MIT's Living Wage data found that the average salary required to live comfortably in the U.S. is $68,499 after taxes. This is nearly $10,000 higher than what the average salary currently is.

What is the average US salary? ›

The average annual average salary in the U.S. is $63,795. The median annual salary, which is often less skewed by outlying numbers, is $59,384. It's worth noting that average and median salaries vary quite a bit by state.

What is the poorest country in the world? ›

Africa
  • Somalia.
  • South Sudan.
  • Sudan.
  • Tanzania.
  • The Gambia.
  • Togo.
  • Uganda.
  • Zambia.

What is the highest paying job in the world? ›

1. Chief Executive Officer (CEO): The CEO role commands the highest salary, with an average annual income of $185,355. Key qualifications include a Master's degree in Business Administration (MBA) or a related field, extensive senior management experience, and exceptional leadership and communication skills. 2.

What is a good salary in the US per month? ›

According to the latest figures by the Bureau of Labor and Statistics, the average salary in USA per month is $5,677 or $68,124 per year. As of 2023, the gross minimum salary in the USA is $32.75 per hour. Salaries range from $32,916 to $112,268 per year and include housing, transport, and other benefits.

What percentage of the world lives on less than $50 a day? ›

The latest global data tells us that 85% of the world population live on less than $30 per day. These are 6.5 billion people. Relying on a higher poverty line of $45 per day you find that 92% live in poverty, and using a lower poverty line of $20 per day you find that 78% live in poverty.

What makes someone upper middle class? ›

One common way to classify the upper middle class is based on income. The upper middle class is often defined as the top 15% to 20% of earners. According to the Social Security Administration's 2022 wage data, the average upper-middle-class income was roughly between $80,000 and $100,000.

What is considered middle class? ›

In a large U.S. city, a middle-class income averages between $52,000 and $155,000. The median household income across all 345 cities is $77,345, making middle-class income limits fall between $51,558 and $154,590.

What does it take to join the 1%? ›

The average American household needs to bring in $652,657 a year to be classed among the top 1% of earners across the country, according to research published Thursday by financial advisors SmartAsset.

How many people are in the 1%? ›

How many people are in the top 1%? Depending on your preference, there are roughly 1,313,064 households in the top one percent or 1,784,529 workers.

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