According to Statistics Austria's latest calculations, the disposable income of households per inhabitant (including non profit institutions serving households) ranged from €19 000 (Carinthia) to €20 500 (Lower Austria and Vorarlberg) in 2009. The disposable income per capita of the Lower Austria and Vorarlberg was followed by the Länder Salzburg (€20 200) and Vienna (€20 100). The figure for Upper Austria was €20 000. The disposable income of households for the Burgenland and Tyrol was €19 500. The figures for Styria and Carinthia were €19 300 and €19 000.
The time series (1995
The primary income (balance of the allocation of primary income account) of households is the income received by households as employment and property income due to their participation in the production process. On the resources side, the allocation of primary income account comprises operating surplus/income from self-employment, employee remuneration and property income. The uses side is composed of (paid) property income.
The secondary distribution of income account reflects the redistribution of (primary) income through monetary transfers (income and property taxes, social contributions, social benefits other than social benefits in kind, other current transfers). The balance of the secondary distribution of income account of the household sector is the disposable income.