摘要
This paper presents a brief analysis of the frequency and cumulative distributions of Americans' annual household income. In addition, a thorough discussion of the correlations between average income and some key demographic variables are included. The data come from the 2004 Survey of Consumer Finances. Utilizing the Survey a new, extraordinarily close, power law, relationship between current annual household income and accumulated financial assets is demonstrated. Another startling result is that the dependence of mean annual income on portfolio composition has nearly perfect power law dependence too. As money has scale, and power laws do not, this makes no sense.