Report: living in Iowa getting more expensive

via Radio Iowa

A new report shows it’s getting more expensive to live in Iowa and many families are struggling to earn enough money to cover their basic needs. Link included to track local data.

The Iowa Policy Project’s 2016 Cost of Living in Iowa report outlines how much working families need to earn in order to pay for such things as food, housing, utilities, child care, and transportation.

IPP research director Peter Fisher says a couple areas of basic expenses have increased substantially in recent years. Rent, on average statewide, has risen 7 to 8 percent, while health insurance premiums have skyrocketed.

“Insurance, on the individual market at least, has gone up 17-to-23 percent,” Fisher said. “These are actually premiums people are paying right now, in 2016, for health insurance.”

Iowa’s current minimum wage is $7.25 an hour. The report states the average Iowa family of four would require each parent to earn at least $16.89 an hour to make ends meet.

“The median wage (in Iowa) is a little less than $16 (an hour). That means half of the jobs in this state pay less than that, yet…these families will need to earn $16 to $25 an hour — full-time, year-round — in order to get by,” Fisher said.

The report identifies some of the lowest overall costs of living are found in the eastern Iowa metros of Waterloo-Cedar Falls, Davenport, Dubuque, and Cedar Rapids. The highest cost region of the state is in the southeast corner, including the cities of Fort Madison, Burlington, and Mount Pleasant.

Link:Iowa Policy Project’s 2016 Cost of Living Report (including local data)

 

About Dave Vickers

Dave has been News Director since 1983 and has been Station General Manager since 1999. Dave has also served on the Board of Directors of the Iowa Broadcast News Association and the Iowa Broadcast Association and has served on the Iowa Freedom of Information Council.
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