'Uncle Sam's Almanac' says Utah has high prices, short commutes

Published: Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2008 12:19 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is America's fourth-largest religious denomination. Prices in Utah are higher than average, while wages are much lower than average. Utah has the second-highest percentage of households that use the Internet but one of the lowest rates of newspaper subscribers.

Those are among tidbits of data in the new "Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2009," often called "Uncle Sam's Almanac," released Wednesday by the U.S. Census Bureau. It has nearly 1,400 tables and charts of data on everything from A (aquaculture) to Z (zinc production).

The mounds of data (available at census.gov) also give some glimpses at where Utah, or institutions important to its residents, rank compared to others. Following are some examples:

RELIGION: The LDS Church is now America's fourth largest individual church denomination with an estimated 5.8 million members. It is behind only the Roman Catholic Church, 67.5 million; the Southern Baptist Convention, 16.3 million; and the United Methodist Church, 8 million, according to Table 75 in the book.

Still, only a tiny fraction of Americans are Mormon — just 1.7 percent, according to Table 74 in the book. In comparison, 51.3 percent of Americans are Protestant; 23.9 percent are Catholic; 16.1 percent are unaffiliated; followed next in order by Mormons.

Story continues below
The book's Table 76 also reports that Utah has the highest number of residents who were adherents of Christian churches in 2000, 74.3 percent. (The national average was only 47.4 percent).

PRICES: Contrary to popular belief, prices were higher in the Salt Lake City metro area in 2007 than the national average.

Items that would cost $100 on average nationally would cost $100.70 in Salt Lake City.

Specifically, groceries that would cost $100 on average nationally would cost $102.30 in Salt Lake, and transportation that would cost $100 nationally would cost $103.50. But housing that would cost $100 nationally would cost only $98 in Salt Lake, $100 worth of utilities would cost only $87.40 and $100 worth of health care would cost only $99.30.

Meanwhile, the average wage per employee in Utah was $35,130 in 2006 (10th lowest among the states), well below the national average of $42,535.

COMMUNICATION: An estimated 82 percent of Utah households used the Internet in 2007, second in the nation behind only Alaska (at 84.3 percent). The national average was 71 percent.

Recent comments

every one I know in utah plays internet games and the owners of these...

ken | Oct. 3, 2009 at 4:35 p.m.

Highest oosts and lowest wages - this and the fact that Utah leads...

Greed capital | Oct. 3, 2009 at 4:08 p.m.

I agree with the pharmacist at 6:36. I work at a pharmacy in utah...

Plan B | Dec. 17, 2008 at 7:32 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

It is animal cruelty at its finest to let the ranges be over run with horses...

Utahn aiding poor

This is such an inspiration. Sometimes the problems of the world seem so...

I was able to attend "El Salvador del Mundo" and can say it was very well...

BYU's football team historically does not do well in bowl games....

Utes excited to go to San Diego

I sure hope our non-obsessed fan base rents another plane and buys another...

back to LV Bowl, buffet lines, and another bowl loss. Another season...

U.N. climate conference opens

Fraud. Deceit. Democrats and thieves. All means possible to steal your money...

Playing time tough for Jazz

CJ does not deserve minutes. This guy would rather tweet about his...

I guess you can schedule UC Davis, Bowling Green, Miami of Ohio all in one...

"Stocks rise as investors await Bernanke speech." This is so wrong. Anyone...

Advertisements