Boone is the only person in this thread who seems to have any common sense so far.
10/27/2008 11:21:52 PM
^sarcasm?
10/27/2008 11:23:23 PM
No. More like a bunch of 20 somethings fresh out of college with professional degrees in highly technical fields who have salaries that are disproportionately high compared to the overwhelming majority of Americans make incredibly poor judges of what constitutes middle class.I was (and am) being 100 percent sincere.
10/27/2008 11:41:17 PM
10/28/2008 12:12:50 AM
10/28/2008 12:16:17 AM
10/28/2008 1:10:42 AM
Oh you silly southerners.Ask a family in NYC making 250 K whether they are rich or middle class.It varies with the geography.
10/28/2008 1:12:58 AM
So use purchasing power parity, then.
10/28/2008 1:17:26 AM
10/28/2008 7:25:28 AM
people confuse upper middle class with wealthy.Being wealthy is more than money.
10/28/2008 7:50:45 AM
Median household income in the US is $50,233.00.So ya'll are saying that as single 20-something's making >$75k, you're middle class?And that households making 4 times the median income is still middle class?
10/28/2008 8:03:40 AM
10/28/2008 8:12:16 AM
10/28/2008 8:41:17 AM
10/28/2008 8:43:44 AM
10/28/2008 8:44:31 AM
^^ I am not QQing over it and I tried to make that clear more than once. But just because I am living comfortably, I still do not think that 75k is out of my description of middle class. Of course I am not making 75k yet either but I dont see the extra money between what I make now and what I will make when I do make 75k being life changing.I do not think that age has much to do with it. I look at pure numbers. So the fact that I am 23 (turning 24 next week) doesn't affect whether I am middle class at the moment or not.So, while you may think that 75k is middle class I strongly disagree. And no offense since I never have problems with you but, you need to stop assuming that simply because someone says they are not middle class that they are whining. We are simply arguing a point here. I never once whined or cried. In fact I pointed out 2x in my post that was extremely happy where I was and realized I was in a good position so that you wouldn't give that canned response and you still assumed I was whining...I am not asking for special privileges by trying to think I am still middle class or something. Frankly I just think that considering $75k of income to not be middle class just because you make less and get by is ludicrous. [Edited on October 28, 2008 at 9:09 AM. Reason : ]
10/28/2008 8:48:18 AM
10/28/2008 9:26:12 AM
10/28/2008 9:28:34 AM
According to census data:Household income distributionBottom 10% $0 to $10,500 Bottom 20% $0 to $18,500 Bottom 25% $0 to $22,500Middle 33% $30,000 to $62,500Middle 20% $35,000 to $55,000Top 25% $77,500 and upTop 20% $92,000 and upTop 5% $167,000 and upTop 1.5% $250,000 and upTop 1% $350,000 and uphttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_middle_classHow exactly is a single 20-something who's just a tick below the top 25% middle class?And how are families in the top 1.5% middle class?
10/28/2008 9:37:48 AM
I am not defining classes by some cute little bracket and the amount of money that can be taken home rather by the average/normal lifestyle lived by people with certain income. I mean, I would guess besides my friends from my company (some of which do make 75k), the majority of my friends make 35,000 a year or less. And despite putting more into my 401k we live pretty much the same lives, in fact some of them have newer, nicer cars than I do. And the friends of mine who make 75k dont live better lives than I do.We all hang out on a regular basis, go on trips together, eat out together, etc. The quality of life and things we are doing are not that different. So I dont see how someone can say that any of us are that far apart in lifestyles. I dont even make 75 as I've stated before, but I just dont see a big difference in any of our lifestyles yet you are saying some of us are middle class and some arent apparently.[Edited on October 28, 2008 at 10:03 AM. Reason : ]
10/28/2008 10:02:46 AM
The problem with just looking at current lifestyles--particularly among singles/couples just starting their lives and careers--is not taking into account the future. Let's say guy A makes 75K and guy B makes 35K. They both drive the same types of cars, live in the same houses, go to the same restaurants, etc. In 10 years, guy A probably has considerable savings/investments to his name whereas guy B probably has very little assuming all the other stuff is equal. The difference between the two salaries is much more pronounced over a long time frame.
10/28/2008 10:10:24 AM
I cant believe no one commented on the Caddyshack II reference.
10/28/2008 10:12:11 AM
middle class doesn't mean middle of America, it describes a freaking life style. Of course the median is low, 20% of the households in this country make < 20k a year. (for reference, working 40/week for 50 weeks at 10/hour is 20k/year)Omar, that was based on definitions as defined by academic break downs of American society. It's break down is based on job responsibilities and roles and the incomes associated with those jobs. As opposed to dividing everyone up based on income first and then seeing what jobs fall under those. Now if you are both making 100k+ each then you are upper(market depending, i am referring to the triangle area), but if your combined is in the 100-150k range that's more middle-middle class to me, but that's not one of their defined tiers.40k a year is not 3k a month take home, learn to taxes. city + state + fed + ss + medicare would be about 30% of that income after standard deductions. So probably around 10k in taxes on that one.since 75k is boone's magic number, lets break it down, 75k single salary in the triangle7500 to 401k2000 to a Roth22000 to taxes 7200 rent (600/month living in a nice work convenient place)1800 gas (150/month)1560 cable/internet (130/month digital w/showtime, dexter + weeds)1200 power/water (100/month)150 renters ins4200 car payment (350/month 20k auto loan, 5 year, decent rate)400 hair care (mens, you normally have to look the part for jobs like this, it means regular grooming)500 car ins (new car)8000 food/dining out/dating (you stop going dutch, you take a woman out, that's gonna cost you 70-100 bucks these days for dinner and a movie, dinner and a club/drinks even more. 2 dates a month will run you 2000-2500 + your regular food, out with the guys, maybe a nice celebratory Friday dinner at work after pulling a big account or something)120 oil changes2000 gifts for others (birthdays, anniversaries, wedding, baby gifts, Christmas. People i know need to stop getting married)1800 clothing (150/month again, looking professional cost, you cant wear shirts with mustard stains)2400 incidentals (dvds, cds, video games, tp, toothpaste etc)2000 (vacation/visit friends/family)480 health ins (40/month)3000 student loans (education isn't cheap)200 gym fees/equipmentafter this, you have about 8500 left. You can A) blow it like a jack ass, and then yes, you can get your bmw. (which would add another 4200 or so to your payments per year for the 330i)B) Stick it into investmentsC) Save it towards a house down payment, wedding, get nice furnishings for your dwelling D) have some cash to actually put towards a hobby.you are not rich/rolling in it. You are living a nice, comfortable life style and you are part of the middle class.[Edited on October 28, 2008 at 10:35 AM. Reason : a]
10/28/2008 10:32:34 AM
^ you as well as others keep mentioning household - i guess in my head i think of a household to consist of some sort of family typically and not a single person who potentially even has a roommate but most of your examples seem to only mention a single person ]]
10/28/2008 10:37:40 AM
that particular post was for boone's single guys making 75k a year are rolling in fat stacks theory.In general 'class' is defined on a per household basis. 2-4 single guys sharing a house creates an interesting issue for this since that's technically 4 tax filing households with no dependents in 1 physical house. Let's defined household as a tax paying entity. Personally I am 1 half of a dink household, i would consider us a middle-middle class triangle household. If i live where my parents lived with this kind of income, I'd be house on a golf course kinda house hold. So regional changes make a lot of difference.
10/28/2008 10:49:45 AM
Also, Middle class != Middle Income
10/28/2008 10:52:12 AM
and since we are using the local area for a reference for many of use, the median income in cary nc is 75k, family is 89k. 61% of the people age 25 and up in cary also hold at least a Baccalaureate degree
10/28/2008 11:16:40 AM
10/28/2008 11:58:09 AM
Boone like many "working class" americans have a flawed view of socio-economic class based purely on income and not having a full realization on wealth.Living paycheck to paycheck a large percentage of americans just do not understand why some people are rich. They only know you show up to work and make money. Thus someone who is "upper" class must be rich simply because they get a really Fat paycheck every Friday.I think one of the qualifiers to categorize someone as rich though would be an income in the top 5%.
10/28/2008 12:28:01 PM
To play to Boone's example. For a married couple with a 50k income this year versus a single guy with a 75k income I did a little math:If they both contributed 20% to a 401k and after that take into account federal tax, the married couple takes home $36k and the single guy takes home $52k. Since Boone seems to think that only the guy with 75k would contribute 20% to his 401k lets assume the married couple contributes 10%. In this case the couple making $50k bring home $40k while the single guy takes home $52k. If they choose to not contribute to a 401k and the single guy still contributes, they bring home about $45 vs his $52.Now lets take this out 10 years. Assume the same tax %s as 2008, and the only way to make it fair is to use the same % raise over the course of 10 years at say 5% per year and run the same calculations. Now, the income for the couple is $77000 while the single guy is $116,000. Single guy brings home: $73000couple brings home: $54000and just for funcouple with 10% 401k: $60,000couple with 0% 401k: %66,000I am just not seeing big enough gaps to justify Boone saying a couple making $50000 definitely IS middle class while a single guy making $75000 in the same year is definitely NOT middle class and is apparently in a whole different league of wealth as the couple.[Edited on October 28, 2008 at 12:35 PM. Reason : ]
10/28/2008 12:32:20 PM
10/28/2008 12:41:05 PM
All y'all are rich to me. It don't pay to be a good-for-nothing anarchist. (And that's exactly how it should be.)On the other hand, I don't think I live any worse now than when my dad was making crazy money. Quality of life doesn't necessarily correlate with spending.
10/28/2008 12:49:11 PM
now you are just talking semantics.the difference, as noted above is about having money and having wealth.
10/28/2008 12:52:56 PM
10/28/2008 1:12:44 PM
10/28/2008 1:35:05 PM
10/28/2008 1:38:18 PM
Which is why number in household and age should be a factor, as I stated on page one.
10/28/2008 1:40:36 PM
^^^You need to keep your terminology straight.are you talking about INCOME or CAPITAL?You can be middle class, and have a low, middle, or high incomeyou can be upper class, and have a low, middle, or high income
10/28/2008 1:43:34 PM
That's where we disagree, I think. It's purely income in relation to household size, age, and geography.If you're making making $300,000 but gambling it all away, you're still upper class. You're just dumb.The inverse is true in regards to a lower class person who maximizes their income.
10/28/2008 1:47:04 PM
10/28/2008 1:50:31 PM
I'm so glad I don't want kids. As long as I only have to support myself, I should be able to get by. Children cost mad cash.
10/28/2008 2:13:07 PM
^^^Ok, let's look at the example of Andrew Lahde. He made multiple millions in hedge funds, and recently cashed out, and is not going to be earning any more money. In 2009 until he either dies or runs out of money, his income will be zero. By your definition of class as "purely income" this guy will be lower class starting next year although he has more money in the bank than any of us are likely to see in our lifetimes.]]
10/28/2008 2:24:00 PM
Booneyou are pwning yourself left and rightjust stop
10/28/2008 2:25:51 PM
Well hell, you were able to find an exception. Pwnt. I'm not the one claiming you have to be in the top 1.5% before you leave the middle class.
10/28/2008 2:38:19 PM
10/28/2008 3:07:11 PM
10/28/2008 5:19:31 PM
10/28/2008 5:41:41 PM
theDuke866 what % do you save per month??I had to buy some things needed after getting my job recently but I plan to stabilize out and automatically save a certain % every month.
10/28/2008 8:56:14 PM
you guys can't just make your own definitions of middle class. middle class incomes don't go above 100k and start around the median income or lower depending on where you live. Its really quite simple. People making above 100k cannot be considered middle class because money and price does not play a role in their everyday life. Gas prices, food prices heating prices and such could double and they wouldn't even have to worry about how they were going to keep the same wheras the middle class must budget and pay close attention to things like that. Over 100k aren't necessarily rich but they are well above middle class. I would call them lower rich class up until 250k. It really doesn't matter that much though (separating rich into subdivisions because once you're making 100k you are set. Its not like you are able to get more necessities when you go from 100k to 300k.
10/29/2008 1:41:41 PM
Just had to post this...
10/29/2008 1:58:15 PM