Americans Suffered Record Decline In Wealth During
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Americans Suffered Record Decline In Wealth During Recession: Report
WASHINGTON, June 11 (Reuters) - Americans suffered a record decline in wealth between 2007 and 2010 as home values tumbled, according to a Federal Reserve report on Monday that underscored the severity of the recent recession.
 The median family's net worth  dropped 38.8 percent during  the three-year period, the Fed said in its  latest report on  changes in U.S. Family Finances, derived from a survey  of  consumer finances. Fed economists told reporters that this was  the  biggest drop in net worth since the survey started in 1989. 
   
 The  median net worth, which is the value of assets minus  debt, plunged to  $77.3 trillion in 2010 from $126.4 trillion in  2007. Net worth in 2010  was at levels last seen in 1992. 
   
 "Although  declines in the values of financial assets or  business were important  factors for some families, the decreases  in median net worth appear to  have been driven most strongly by  a broad collapse in house prices,"  the Fed said. 
   
 The survey's findings shine a harsh  light on the devastation  inflicted on the economy by the 2007-09  recession and could help  to explain the frustratingly slow pace of the  recovery. 
   
 The housing market's collapse was at  the core of the  recession, during which the economy contracted nearly  5.1  percent between the third quarter of 2007 and the second quarter   of 2009, with the unemployment rate rising 4.5 percentage points  to 9.5  percent. 
   
 "Housing was of greater importance than financial assets for  the wealth position of most families," the Fed said. 
   
 The  survey found that the decline in median net worth was   large for  families in groups where housing was a larger share of  assets, such as  families headed by someone 35 to 44 years old  and families in the West  region. 
   
 "A substantial part of the declines  observed in net worth  over the 2007-10 period can be associated with  decreases in the  level of unrealized capital gains on families'assets,"  the Fed  said. 
   
 The share of total assets of all  families attributable to  unrealized capital gains from real estate,  businesses, stocks,  or mutual funds fell 11.6 percentage points to 24.5  percent in  2010, it said. 
   
 While the overall  level of debt owed by families was  unchanged, debt as a percentage of  assets rose to 16.4 percent  in 2010 from 14.8 percent in 2007 because  the value of the  underlying assets, especially housing, decreased  faster. 
   
 The share of families carrying a credit  card balance fell  6.7 percentage points to 39.4 percent in 2010. The  median  balance fell 16.1 percent to $2,600 in 2010 from $3,100 in 2007. 
   
 The  proportion of families with debt payments greater than  40 percent of  their income was nearly unchanged between 2007 and  2010. 
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Reuters | Posted: 06/11/2012 2:02 pm Updated: 06/11/2012 3:04 pm