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What is exactly a middle class family in USA ''TODAY'' ?

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
Except the big cities by the coasts *were* where middle class people lived in prior generations. "just move to Iowa bro" is conceding the point.

The problem isn't that people have "computers in their pocket" - those things are cheap, relatively speaking. TVs are way cheaper than they were in prior generations. All of that is vastly outweighed by the cost of housing and other essentials. My grandpa raised a huge family in Bergen County NJ on one laborer income, go look at housing prices there today. Actually I'll tell you - it's $700K median. The idea that his grandchildren need to scatter in the wind and move to Iowa and South Carolina to have even a semblance of what he did is so destructive to the bonds of family and commmunity. It's horrible.
But you dont have to move to a different state or province. If someone moved from the expessive Toronto hub an hour or so away to Guelph or Kitchener, the cost of a similar home is probably cut in half. And also the farther out you go from metro hubs, the homes and neighbourhoods will be newer and more spacious too.
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
Sooooo, life stays static forever? Of course demographics change. All those retired folks camping in out in what used to be family neighborhoods reduce supply. Population is what, double what it was when your granddad started out?

My point about cell phones is that is a NEW (relatively speaking) cost. The device is anywhere from $100-1000 every few years and the plans are what, $20-50/person? So that is a few hundred/mo that never existed before the 2000s. Same with TV. We had 2 tvs growing up. A family one and a little kitchen one. The times we had cable is was just $20 or so. Long distance calls or dial up internet was of course quite expensive and so were precious and tightly controlled by mom. But now homes just eat a 50-80/mo internet bill and tack on another 50-200 in cable/satellite/streaming. Again, another couple hundred gone.

Are these things absolutely necessary? Nope. 1 family PC with a basic internet plan will do for juniors homework, dads bill paying, and moms shopping. We don't HAVE to be chained to these things. Yet even poor households...there they are.

So you can't really compare 50's-90s living with now, the baked in costs for the drastically improved electronic options is just insane. And it applies to other areas as well, just look at what grocery stores offer now compared to then, and wonder why shit is more expensive, those organic free range grain fed omega3 eggs don't come cheap but that stuff used to be the exclusive provence of expensive grocers or rural farmers markets, now they are everywhere.
Yup.

Problem is a lot of people with no money amp up on shit the past 20 years when back then a lot of people were kinda happy with modestly priced stuff. Even tech gadgets. But now, everyone seems focused on latest tvs, phones, Macs, and every worker with half decent money to blow wants a BMW 3-series as a starter car. Something in people's mindsets changed. Maybe it's social media showcasing what everyone can have so everyone tries their best to blow their bank account to the last dollar trying to beat everyone else. BMWs and Mercedes and any higher priced brand were meant for 40+ year olds who have a high paying career. Thats why the old stigma were old fogie execs driving those cars. Not 27 year olds.

As for organic food, it's all profit. My old boss worked for a large produce company after he left. A lot of that expensive stuff isnt actually expensive to make. It costs the store the same/similar price as the regular stuff but they just double the price because they know people will buy it over regular apples.

Same with my company. Any time we launched green packaged eco products it doesn't cost us more. It actually costs us less to make as it has less chemicals and dyes in it. But the price a consumer pays for it is jacked up.
 
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diffusionx

Gold Member
Sooooo, life stays static forever? Of course demographics change. All those retired folks camping in out in what used to be family neighborhoods reduce supply. Population is what, double what it was when your granddad started out?

My point about cell phones is that is a NEW (relatively speaking) cost. The device is anywhere from $100-1000 every few years and the plans are what, $20-50/person? So that is a few hundred/mo that never existed before the 2000s. Same with TV. We had 2 tvs growing up. A family one and a little kitchen one. The times we had cable is was just $20 or so. Long distance calls or dial up internet was of course quite expensive and so were precious and tightly controlled by mom. But now homes just eat a 50-80/mo internet bill and tack on another 50-200 in cable/satellite/streaming. Again, another couple hundred gone.

Are these things absolutely necessary? Nope. 1 family PC with a basic internet plan will do for juniors homework, dads bill paying, and moms shopping. We don't HAVE to be chained to these things. Yet even poor households...there they are.

So you can't really compare 50's-90s living with now, the baked in costs for the drastically improved electronic options is just insane. And it applies to other areas as well, just look at what grocery stores offer now compared to then, and wonder why shit is more expensive, those organic free range grain fed omega3 eggs don't come cheap but that stuff used to be the exclusive provence of expensive grocers or rural farmers markets, now they are everywhere.

This is running suspiciously close to boomerposting. The fact is, the cost of technology has dropped incredibly in the past 30-40 years. Yes, you now have a cell phone. The cell phone is actually really cheap and replaces lots of different devices and doodads you used to have around your house. I don't need a flashlight anymore, to use a simple example. You used to have to pay extra for international calls and even calls outside your area code. A lot of people actually don't even have cable these days, whereas it was very common in the 90s and 00s. Etc. etc. Simply, a TV in every room today is cheaper than a big TV in the living rooom and a small TV in the bedroom 20-30 years ago. Soon we may be living in a world where people don't even really have TVs, because they watch everything on their phones.

So the problem isn't technology. What has exploded in price is primarily the things the government has their paws in the most: housing, university, and health care. All that stuff has exploded. And that is the stuff that makes a "middle class lifestyle" extremely difficult. Claiming the issue is to many TVs is like claiming the issue is millenials eating too much avocado toast. It's a distraction.

But you dont have to move to a different state or province. If someone moved from the expessive Toronto hub an hour or so away to Guelph or Kitchener, the cost of a similar home is probably cut in half. And also the farther out you go from metro hubs, the homes and neighbourhoods will be newer and more spacious too.
I was specifically addressing a guy who said to move out of the coastal areas. Well, for some of us it isn't some faraway resort or vacation you go to once every five years, it is our home, it is where we grew up and where we lived and where our families are. I am sure the capitalists would love for us to become atomized individuals thousands of miles away from all the connections we have, but that is not healthy for people and not healthy for society in the long run.

You know, for a long time, Los Angeles was actually considered the most affordable, reasonably priced big city. Housing actually wasn't expensive there. In the past 5-10 years, it's just completely changed and it's a disaster. And yes that does have an effect on the ability to live, especially if you are from and live and work in LA. It makes life harder and more difficult and "just move farther bro" isn't helpful. If you want to actually talk about the deterioration of the middle class, it is this, not too many people on a data plan.
 
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Happosai

Hold onto your panties
I live in an area that's considered "touristy" and "a destination", which probably makes the upper class here pretty different than they might be at most places. Because of the extremely high cost of living where I'm at, the only people here who are upper class are people who generated their considerable wealth elsewhere and brought it here. I've met countless people here who worked their whole lives at normal jobs so that they could retire here, only to have completely run out of money a few years later and be forced to start working again for minimum wage. It's really sad.

Even someone with a top position here, like the head administrator of the local hospital, wouldn't make enough money to be considered upper class. (don't even get me started on health care here) They might make enough to qualify for a 30 year mortgage on a modest 3 or 4 bedroom home, but wouldn't be able to afford a newly constructed house.

Two thirds of all real estate transactions here happen in cash / lump sums, meaning the buyer doesn't carry a mortgage. If you rub shoulders with the "who's who" about town, you'll hear gossip about "that guy who started and sold off Survey Monkey" not getting along with "that guy who started a company that sold off to Youtube", or "that former CEO of McDonald Douglas" bought another different house here because he didn't like being neighbors during the summertime with "that guy who has 28 New York Times bestselling fantasy novels".

The elite come here to retire (for a few months out of the year) - and it is absolutely to the detriment of everyone else in the region.
That news is an eye opener though as Upper Class certainly can be redefined the way you illustrated from your own neighborhood. You have to think about places like Jamaica or the Bahamas too. I've worked with the lower class (poor) from these countries and there's really not a Middle Class at all. It's them and then all the retiring celebrity millionaires. It says a lot about the person too. I understand how if you'd made it big and wanted to retire on an island. However, they do little (other than pay taxes) to support and tend to not like that there are still 'natives' on "their" islands. Same case with Hawai'i but a much older tale than those I mentioned.
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
I was specifically addressing a guy who said to move out of the coastal areas. Well, for some of us it isn't some faraway resort or vacation you go to once every five years, it is our home, it is where we grew up and where we lived and where our families are. I am sure the capitalists would love for us to become atomized individuals thousands of miles away from all the connections we have, but that is not healthy for people and not healthy for society in the long run.

You know, for a long time, Los Angeles was actually considered the most affordable, reasonably priced big city. Housing actually wasn't expensive there. In the past 5-10 years, it's just completely changed and it's a disaster. And yes that does have an effect on the ability to live, especially if you are from and live and work in LA. It makes life harder and more difficult and "just move farther bro" isn't helpful. If you want to actually talk about the deterioration of the middle class, it is this, not too many people on a data plan.
I get it.

But also, the people driving up the price of homes are also fellow people who live in the same area. Its not all outsiders barging in. Although in every real estate hot spot, there's that too as a double whammy of demand.

In order for homes to go up in price, there also needs to be sellers who list and accept jacked up prices. what they do after they sell (stick around in the area or move to another city) is up to them.

So in a nutshell, you want stable affordability due to wanting to live in a generational family home hoping for zero outsider influences. That's a tough slog being in your own bubble.
 

AJUMP23

Member
I get it.

But also, the people driving up the price of homes are also fellow people who live in the same area. Its not all outsiders barging in. Although in every real estate hot spot, there's that too as a double whammy of demand.

In order for homes to go up in price, there also needs to be sellers who list and accept jacked up prices. what they do after they sell (stick around in the area or move to another city) is up to them.

So in a nutshell, you want stable affordability due to wanting to live in a generational family home hoping for zero outsider influences. That's a tough slog being in your own bubble.

Home prices are market economics in a simple form. The price of the home is what the market will bare. There are always outliers of course, but for the most part the seller is desirous of profit, and if they can find a way to make more profit they should.

Currently there are some outside forces exacerbating the housing market, large banks and invest firms like Berkshire Hathaway are buying up a lot of property. so it is not all just private sale.
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
This is running suspiciously close to boomerposting.
Is that supposed to be some kind of sick burn?

JP9a3ya.jpg


But my point is that I bet the average family today is spending more of their income as a percentage on cell phones, internet, and whatnot than an 80's family did. Sure there are upsides, lots more daily commo with grandma and fewer fights over who got to use the one land line at 8pm to chat with friends, but that's real $$$ out the door for a perceived "need". I bet many families spend almost as much on phone/internet stuff as they do on groceries. So again, very hard to do an apple:apples comparison with lifestyles of the "heyday of the middle class" versus how families choose to operate today.

But I still think the middle class exists.
 
What is this communist nonsense? The "middle class" has existed for a THOUSAND YEARS since merchants, artisans, and craftsmen could own their own property and thus were neither nobility nor serf.

Put in modern economic terms the "middle class" exists between the dirt poor living paycheck to paycheck (or off government dole) and the folks with capital to invest or enough passive income generators to not have to work at all but still maintain a high standard of living.

The "middle class" today often encompasses both partners working because the lifestyle has inflated, not the cost of the basics or wage stagnation. Look at the size of the homes today versus the 40s. Every family member had a computer in their pocket. There is a TV in every room. Cars are far more advanced than they were. The trips are more elaborate, no more roadside motels with the whole family crammed in to see Disney. But easy credit is a trap, that is true.

Some of you guys are just silly. Get the FUCK out of those big cities by the coasts with that insane real estate and be "middle class" in "middle america" and see how easy it can be. Yeah, there aren't 50 hip restaurants in a mile radius, not every concert rolls through, and yah might have to see a cow at times, but trust me, it's worth it :p

hey, I'm not here to change minds or anything. if you feel my prespective is incorrect, that's prefectly fine. it most likely is true too since not all things can fit in all situations. and that's kinda my point. setting a fixed standard for "middle class" is pointless because even within the same US state right now, different area's life style and value can have huge variations.

and why is "communism/socialism!" always the default reaction when some folks disagree with stuff? my family ran away from a communist country and trust me when I said that's not it at all. :messenger_grinning_sweat: as for the "middle class" going back thousands of years, you do realize that back then, be it a small corner store owner or a merchant with a fleet of ships, they all counted as "middle class" right? even back then the term was rather meaningless since it was basically anyone who's not a noblity or peasant. and while we're on the subject of the past, sure there were less other expenses back in the 40s than today, but a lot of the other expenses were also higher than they are today. all the home appliance and furniture combine would be more expensive than the house itself and often requires their own payment plans. you really can't make a good comoparison between then and now. and your point of city vs country can also be flip the other way around. why is it that the argument is always "city folks should get out of the city and see how folks live out in the country."? why is it never the other way around? "let's get folks from the country into the city and let them live there and see what they can learn."? there are difficulties with both life styles. take myself for example. I live in LA and I don't own where I live at. I rarely go to any "hip restaurants" when I dine out, and I had never gone to any concert out here in the last 25 years. I like living here because of the variety, convenience, selection and opportunities it provides. and it's not like I don't know the country life either. I worked out of Wyoming half a year every year back in my last job and I would stay and travel through Utah and South Dakota also. there are a lot of things that's great with country life, but in the end it's not for me or a lot of other folks. the "middle class" situation is the same. maybe it would be easier to be "middle class" out in the country, but that life style is no longer something that is suitable, obtainable or desireable for everyone. that's why I said "middle class" is meaningless because all of us would count as "middle class" too and we all live extremely different life style. if someone wants to chase the "middle class" dream, then by all means go for it. but I'm fine the way I am now, just working and living, without "class".
 

Toons

Member
This is running suspiciously close to boomerposting. The fact is, the cost of technology has dropped incredibly in the past 30-40 years. Yes, you now have a cell phone. The cell phone is actually really cheap and replaces lots of different devices and doodads you used to have around your house. I don't need a flashlight anymore, to use a simple example. You used to have to pay extra for international calls and even calls outside your area code. A lot of people actually don't even have cable these days, whereas it was very common in the 90s and 00s. Etc. etc. Simply, a TV in every room today is cheaper than a big TV in the living rooom and a small TV in the bedroom 20-30 years ago. Soon we may be living in a world where people don't even really have TVs, because they watch everything on their phones.

So the problem isn't technology. What has exploded in price is primarily the things the government has their paws in the most: housing, university, and health care. All that stuff has exploded. And that is the stuff that makes a "middle class lifestyle" extremely difficult. Claiming the issue is to many TVs is like claiming the issue is millenials eating too much avocado toast. It's a distraction.


I was specifically addressing a guy who said to move out of the coastal areas. Well, for some of us it isn't some faraway resort or vacation you go to once every five years, it is our home, it is where we grew up and where we lived and where our families are. I am sure the capitalists would love for us to become atomized individuals thousands of miles away from all the connections we have, but that is not healthy for people and not healthy for society in the long run.

You know, for a long time, Los Angeles was actually considered the most affordable, reasonably priced big city. Housing actually wasn't expensive there. In the past 5-10 years, it's just completely changed and it's a disaster. And yes that does have an effect on the ability to live, especially if you are from and live and work in LA. It makes life harder and more difficult and "just move farther bro" isn't helpful. If you want to actually talk about the deterioration of the middle class, it is this, not too many people on a data plan.

Soooooo much this.

Literally insane how many people buy into the bulls*** everyone got a TV narrative.

Tvs arent even that expensive unless you want a home theater system. You can have 3 50 inch smart TVs for less than 1200.

Wages have stagnated and screwed over anyone who isn't a trust fundie, or who hasn't sank ten years if their life into a big, niche degree that they can do from anywhere. Everyone else is royally screwed and the writings been on the wall way too long for the false narratives to be excusable.
 

tamago84

Member
Honestly everything is treated as a service now. Tangibility is something for the mega rich or a larger than usual sacrifice compared to the 90-00s. My salary is good but i live in an apt and lease, i dont plan on leaving a will or anything- will just continue in a life of rental
 

Winter John

Gold Member
I remember back in the day one of my buddies accused me of being a yuppie because I bought a car, instead of just stealing one. I still get a kick out of that. More recently I somehow ended up watching videos on YT of ghost towns and failed cities. I had to stop watching that shit because it was freaking me out. It was making me all paranoid thinking about what would happen if our area dried up and my bar failed. If worst came to worse we’d have to move back to Brooklyn. I don’t want to go back there. I couldn’t stand it. The noise, the dirt, the constant hassle. It’s too much. Last week me and some buddies had a box of hand grenades. We went out into the middle of nowhere and had a ton of fun getting wasted and blowing shit up. You couldn’t do that in Red Hook.
 
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Blade2.0

Member
Is that supposed to be some kind of sick burn?


But my point is that I bet the average family today is spending more of their income as a percentage on cell phones, internet, and whatnot than an 80's family did. Sure there are upsides, lots more daily commo with grandma and fewer fights over who got to use the one land line at 8pm to chat with friends, but that's real $$$ out the door for a perceived "need". I bet many families spend almost as much on phone/internet stuff as they do on groceries. So again, very hard to do an apple:apples comparison with lifestyles of the "heyday of the middle class" versus how families choose to operate today.

But I still think the middle class exists.
Could they possibly be spending a bigger percentage on those things because wages haven't risen with productivity since the 70s? There's a study that says millennials and younger are the most frugal among us and yet the younger generations still aren't making ends meet. At that point it isn't an individual problem, it's a systemic issue.


Why is it so hard to accept that maybe our system fucked over the younger generation?
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
Why is it so hard to accept that maybe our system fucked over the younger generation?
It certainly fucked over kids that thought taking out 100k+ in loans for an english or theater degree was a good idea.

But the guys that went onto trades, or got associates or certs as lab techs, rad techs, OR techs, nurses, etc, folks cant hire them fast enough.
 

Toons

Member
It certainly fucked over kids that thought taking out 100k+ in loans for an english or theater degree was a good idea.

Who sets the price for those loans and predatorily pushes kids into them by showing them that they're doomed to work dead end jobs sitting behind a counter making less than it costs to live if they dont? Other teenagers?

Every degree is ridiculously expensive and predatorily pushed onto young people takes years of their young adult life and rarely is designed to set them up for failure.

All youve done is prove his point.

But the guys that went onto trades, or got associates or certs as lab techs, rad techs, OR techs, nurses, etc, folks cant hire them fast enough.

So your evidence that a middle class still exists is by laying out that only like 5 career paths can guarantee you any real financial stability and if you want to do anything else/don't live in an area where those things are feasible, then you have to be below the poverty line.
 

Blade2.0

Member
It certainly fucked over kids that thought taking out 100k+ in loans for an english or theater degree was a good idea.

But the guys that went onto trades, or got associates or certs as lab techs, rad techs, OR techs, nurses, etc, folks cant hire them fast enough.
So degrees that won't earn as much should cost less to get? But they don't. Seems like a systemic issue again.

EDIT: And do you seriously think we don't need English teachers? They deserve just as much of a good life for providing society for an essential part of it as a STEM degree does.
 
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Dr.Guru of Peru

played the long game
It certainly fucked over kids that thought taking out 100k+ in loans for an english or theater degree was a good idea.

But the guys that went onto trades, or got associates or certs as lab techs, rad techs, OR techs, nurses, etc, folks cant hire them fast enough.
Being hired "fast enough" is not the same thing as "not being fucked over". These people also cannot afford the same standard of living as their parents did.
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
Man, some of guys will bend over backward defending folks taking out loans for a degree they KNOW won't pay shit. Go to a cheaper school, don't go until you can get financial aid or a scholarship, work for a bit and save, work for the GI Bill. LOTS of options other than "waaaa waaa da system is baaaad because my Harvard art history degree can't land me a 250k/yr art curation job at the Louve so I can pay back the $350k in loans I took out."

Guess what. If your folks cant pay and you can cant earn a scholarship, those degrees at those institutions ARE NOT FOR YOU. Learn a trade or go a cheaper route. Get a degree that will support you and do the other thing "for fun". Or, if you DO take the gamble, don't whine about it when it doesn't pay off.

I gave just 5 careers that are booming and in demand. You can get into them in just a few months or years, heck, some places will PAY YOU to learn and come work for them. Options are there folks, no one sold anyone that "ANY college degree = high paying job".
 

Blade2.0

Member
Man, some of guys will bend over backward defending folks taking out loans for a degree they KNOW won't pay shit. Go to a cheaper school, don't go until you can get financial aid or a scholarship, work for a bit and save, work for the GI Bill. LOTS of options other than "waaaa waaa da system is baaaad because my Harvard art history degree can't land me a 250k/yr art curation job at the Louve so I can pay back the $350k in loans I took out."

Guess what. If your folks cant pay and you can cant earn a scholarship, those degrees at those institutions ARE NOT FOR YOU. Learn a trade or go a cheaper route. Get a degree that will support you and do the other thing "for fun". Or, if you DO take the gamble, don't whine about it when it doesn't pay off.

I gave just 5 careers that are booming and in demand. You can get into them in just a few months or years, heck, some places will PAY YOU to learn and come work for them. Options are there folks, no one sold anyone that "ANY college degree = high paying job".
Degrees shouldn't only be for people that can afford them bud. They're supposed to be what helps you get ahead. Not be gatekept for those that can afford them. You're just describing more systemic issues but can't see it. You only see individual failure. Why does it cost 100k+ for garbage degrees? Hell why should it cost 100k for any degree? You don't think there's a fucking problem when a college degree already gives you more debt than the last generations' houses cost them right out of the gate. How can you even act like it isn't a systemic issue at that point?
 
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jason10mm

Gold Member
Degrees shouldn't only be for people that can afford them bud. They're supposed to be what helps you get ahead. Not be gatekept for those that can afford them. You're just describing more systemic issues but can't see it. You only see individual failure. Why does it cost 100k+ for garbage degrees? Hell why should it cost 100k for any degree? You don't think there's a fucking problem when a college degree already gives you more debt than the last generations' houses cost them right out of the gate. How can you even act like it isn't a systemic issue at that point?
The degrees cost that much because students have easy access to loans. I'll agree that sally/fannie mae is a HUGE problem because colleges have started chasing students with luxury instead of quality of academics. Cut the easy money train and watch colleges shed those 50 faculty "diversity engagement" departments and start working on rigorous educations that show a successful hiring trend again.

But students are adults, even if young. It's pretty easy today so do some research and see the outcomes.

And YES, expensive degrees without secure post-college employment is FOR THE IDLE RICH. Why do you think Harvard has english and art degrees? For rich girls so they can meet the business and STEM guys. For rich boys so they can get ANY degree, then go work for daddy regardless. Or for the precious few that can earn a scholarship. Definitely not for rando folks that can secure a loan.

There are lots of ways to get a quality education without taking loans. You are often trading time for $$$ though, or you gotta compete for limited slots at a public school, or work through the degree, taking a semester off to earn money or whatever. In the 80's and 90's this was basically the plot of every youth film. It's no secret, folks just pretend that they are "owed" something more than they are.
 

th4tguy

Member
I've actually thought about Raleigh. Seems nice there.
You and everyone else.
Tip, you say Raleigh but no one actually moves to Raleigh. Raleigh is old and established neighborhoods and retail.
People move to the surrounding towns with cheaper newer developments and nicer retail/ community areas.
I’ve lived here my whole life and we are so overwhelmed with transplants that I get surprised and funny looks whenever I tell people that.
 

Blade2.0

Member
The degrees cost that much because students have easy access to loans. I'll agree that sally/fannie mae is a HUGE problem because colleges have started chasing students with luxury instead of quality of academics. Cut the easy money train and watch colleges shed those 50 faculty "diversity engagement" departments and start working on rigorous educations that show a successful hiring trend again.

But students are adults, even if young. It's pretty easy today so do some research and see the outcomes.

And YES, expensive degrees without secure post-college employment is FOR THE IDLE RICH. Why do you think Harvard has english and art degrees? For rich girls so they can meet the business and STEM guys. For rich boys so they can get ANY degree, then go work for daddy regardless. Or for the precious few that can earn a scholarship. Definitely not for rando folks that can secure a loan.

There are lots of ways to get a quality education without taking loans. You are often trading time for $$$ though, or you gotta compete for limited slots at a public school, or work through the degree, taking a semester off to earn money or whatever. In the 80's and 90's this was basically the plot of every youth film. It's no secret, folks just pretend that they are "owed" something more than they are.
Except other countries can have these same degrees without sending their citizens into massive debt. Maybe we should enjoy their way of doing it.
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
Except other countries can have these same degrees without sending their citizens into massive debt. Maybe we should enjoy their way of doing it.
And other countries flood our schools with students because they are the best. Maybe they should do it our way??
 

Meicyn

Gold Member
The degrees cost that much because students have easy access to loans. I'll agree that sally/fannie mae is a HUGE problem because colleges have started chasing students with luxury instead of quality of academics. Cut the easy money train and watch colleges shed those 50 faculty "diversity engagement" departments and start working on rigorous educations that show a successful hiring trend again.
You’re so close. The problem isn’t access to student loans, it’s what public universities are using that money for, i.e. the luxuries you mentioned. If you use access to student loans as the problem, then the implied solution is to reduce access, which leads to a less educated population which in turn, makes the country as a whole less competitive with other nations.

We need to change how public universities are run, which are effectively operating like corporations at this point. Money sourced from student loans should come with strings attached. We literally did this with the GI Bill and military tuition assistance programs, resulting in the closure of some private diploma farm institutions who were completely subsidized by taxpayer dollars exploiting veterans who didn’t know any better.
 

dave_d

Member
The degrees cost that much because students have easy access to loans. I'll agree that sally/fannie mae is a HUGE problem because colleges have started chasing students with luxury instead of quality of academics. Cut the easy money train and watch colleges shed those 50 faculty "diversity engagement" departments and start working on rigorous educations that show a successful hiring trend again.
Pretty much. Of course fat chance of that since now the federal government is the one making the money handing out those loans. (I think I've mentioned the feds nationalized the student loan industry back in 2009/2010. )
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
You’re so close. The problem isn’t access to student loans, it’s what public universities are using that money for, i.e. the luxuries you mentioned. If you use access to student loans as the problem, then the implied solution is to reduce access, which leads to a less educated population which in turn, makes the country as a whole less competitive with other nations.

We need to change how public universities are run, which are effectively operating like corporations at this point. Money sourced from student loans should come with strings attached. We literally did this with the GI Bill and military tuition assistance programs, resulting in the closure of some private diploma farm institutions who were completely subsidized by taxpayer dollars exploiting veterans who didn’t know any better.
The plan I like the best is a university garnishes a percentage of your wages for x years. So a premed program might garnish 10% of your pay for 10 years (expected to make 200k/yr so the college makes 200k) but an English degree takes 20% for 10 years (expected salary 50k so 100k). If you don't earn, the college makes less. Incentives them to get students that will perform, focus on degrees that can earn, and keep costs down for the liberal arts that really shouldn't cost that much. Put the onus to show value of a degree on the college.
 

Toons

Member
Double post but fuck it, this is relevant.



We need more people like this, and less folks being apologists for these corpos screwing over the modern generation. These on on the ground people living the actual reality out there, and seeing what's happening.

Its a shame probably folks in her own community will call her a commie or something for being concerned about her children's future.
 

Toons

Member
And other countries flood our schools with students because they are the best. Maybe they should do it our way??

You mean,, the kids who have more money because they have better paying jobs and lower cost of living, so they can afford expenses like that, are actually able to take advantage of those offerings? No way man!

You're, again, reaching the right answer, but then rejecting that answer and turning around to look for another culprit.

The writing is on the wall.
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
You mean,, the kids who have more money because they have better paying jobs and lower cost of living, so they can afford expenses like that, are actually able to take advantage of those offerings? No way man!

You're, again, reaching the right answer, but then rejecting that answer and turning around to look for another culprit.

The writing is on the wall.
Or, and hear me out, the rich kids from overseas, who could go ANYWHERE, come to America because our schools are the best. Those cheaper subsidized foreign schools just aren't as good if cost is no object. Maybe less well off Americans should go to college in Sweden or China?
 
Or, and hear me out, the rich kids from overseas, who could go ANYWHERE, come to America because our schools are the best. Those cheaper subsidized foreign schools just aren't as good if cost is no object. Maybe less well off Americans should go to college in Sweden or China?

Subsidised foreign schools are not subsidised for foreigners 🤦‍♂️
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
Subsidised foreign schools are not subsidised for foreigners 🤦‍♂️
So schools are expensive for Americans everywhere, is that what you are saying?

And subsidized schools aren't cheap, everyone (from that coubtry) is just paying all the time instead of just the ones who directly benefit.
 
So schools are expensive for Americans everywhere, is that what you are saying?

And subsidized schools aren't cheap, everyone (from that coubtry) is just paying all the time instead of just the ones who directly benefit.

apparently university education is expensive for Americans, yes

and that is how taxes and socialised institutions work, yes
 

Heimdall_Xtreme

Jim Ryan Fanclub's #1 Member
Home Alone was DEFINITELY upper class. But lots of shows had to use larger spaces for film purposes than the characters technically could afford. 80's/90's had plenty of middle class (Married with Children, Rosanne) along with upper class (Fresh Prince, The Nanny, Silver Spoons).

I'd say a middle class experience today would be both parents working, big screen tv in every room, kids on ipads/iphones all the time, and 1 big vacation a year. At least a 3 bedroom living space, probably 4, so depends on the # of kids if they bunk up. No servants, housecleaners, or nannys though, unlike other countries that stuff is almost all reserved for upper class in America. We use day care and do the house work ourselves.

Wow.

The way you describe it imagines that the family are living in the
Buckingham Palace
😂😂😂
 

Toons

Member
So schools are expensive for Americans everywhere, is that what you are saying?

If they're so expensive that you need to come from a cost of living a tenth of the equivalent of your own country, in addition to having lifelong benefit from free Healthcare, to be able to realistically attend, then its too expensive lol.

Having good education system is irrelevant if 90% of the country can't afford to go without guaranteeing they'll be poor until they are 30, if they are lucky to get a decent job by then.

And even if you get out of that, the jobs barely pay enough to make it worth it. It's ultimately a gamble, and how many people csn you ask to take a $100,000 gamble that may or may not pay off in 10 years?

No, the problem goes much deeper. The system is flawed and needs improvement, if not overhaul.

And subsidized schools aren't cheap, everyone (from that coubtry) is just paying all the time instead of just the ones who directly benefit.

They are paying from a bigger surplus, because their wages, while lower than the US, dont get nearly as much siphoned from them, their housing is much cheaper, etc.
 

Regginator

Member
What is this communist nonsense? The "middle class" has existed for a THOUSAND YEARS since merchants, artisans, and craftsmen could own their own property and thus were neither nobility nor serf.

Put in modern economic terms the "middle class" exists between the dirt poor living paycheck to paycheck (or off government dole) and the folks with capital to invest or enough passive income generators to not have to work at all but still maintain a high standard of living.

The "middle class" today often encompasses both partners working because the lifestyle has inflated, not the cost of the basics or wage stagnation. Look at the size of the homes today versus the 40s. Every family member had a computer in their pocket. There is a TV in every room. Cars are far more advanced than they were. The trips are more elaborate, no more roadside motels with the whole family crammed in to see Disney. But easy credit is a trap, that is true.

Some of you guys are just silly. Get the FUCK out of those big cities by the coasts with that insane real estate and be "middle class" in "middle america" and see how easy it can be. Yeah, there aren't 50 hip restaurants in a mile radius, not every concert rolls through, and yah might have to see a cow at times, but trust me, it's worth it :p

It's genuinely impressive how you've managed to say so little with so many words. :messenger_beaming: You seem to be under the impression that the "middle" class still exist in a meaningful way, like they used to do, but then you give an example in which you basically prove otherwise. Middle classes have existed historically, yes, and to an insignificant extent still do. Not too long ago they were called the "petite bourgeoisie", who owned their own small-scale means of productions and the fruits of their labour.

But how does that translate to the modern-day "middle class"? The answer is it doesn't. The overwhelmingly vast majority of this "middle class" doesn't own capital (unless you count insignificant amount of stocks and shares or whatever, in that case :messenger_tears_of_joy:) nor do they own their own means of production. They are employed in wage-labour, regardless of whether or not they earn 40K or 200K. Classes are determined by your relation to the means of production, not what the number on your pay-check says.

So no, in the context of current American politics, the "middle class" doesn't exist, at least not in a meaningful way. What the average Joe in the USA sees as "middle class" is merely a portion of the working class with a higher pay-check.
 

Thaedolus

Member
So no, in the context of current American politics, the "middle class" doesn't exist, at least not in a meaningful way. What the average Joe in the USA sees as "middle class" is merely a portion of the working class with a higher pay-check.
Seems odd to come in with a totally different definition of something then condescendingly tut tut at someone for using the commonly accepted definition but ok.
 
Seems odd to come in with a totally different definition of something then condescendingly tut tut at someone for using the commonly accepted definition but ok.

It all depends if you call the class on the rung lower “working class” or “lower class”. If the former then Regginator Regginator marxist definition is correct, as class is divided between those that have to work for others and those that don’t. It’s a clear distinction.

But if it’s the latter, and we have lower and middle classes, where both are working class, then the boundaries become fuzzy and we’re mostly in the realm of aesthetic differences.
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
It all depends if you call the class on the rung lower “working class” or “lower class”. If the former then Regginator Regginator marxist definition is correct, as class is divided between those that have to work for others and those that don’t. It’s a clear distinction.

But if it’s the latter, and we have lower and middle classes, where both are working class, then the boundaries become fuzzy and we’re mostly in the realm of aesthetic differences.
This is why I called out communist nonsense. In THIS country (America) this "working class" bullshit doesn't fly. What we DO have here is lower, middle, and upper class defined by your economic resources and folks can freely move up and down based on their ability, drive, opportunities, and luck. There isn't a caste system here like India, nor some sort of "upper/lower" system propagated by anything other than your own ability and circumstances. Obviously there are factors that limit folks moving up, we ain't all upper class, clearly, but to sit there and say "the middle class is a myth" when there is a thriving small business system in the US, lots of well paid white collar jobs, plenty of blue collar money to be made with some hustle, and guess what, folks COME HERE to work, by the damned MILLIONS, ain't no one rushing to get to those communist countries due to economic security, a guaranteed roof over your head, and three squares a day. Might as well just get yourself into a prison, same end result.
 
This is why I called out communist nonsense. In THIS country (America) this "working class" bullshit doesn't fly. What we DO have here is lower, middle, and upper class defined by your economic resources and folks can freely move up and down based on their ability, drive, opportunities, and luck. There isn't a caste system here like India, nor some sort of "upper/lower" system propagated by anything other than your own ability and circumstances. Obviously there are factors that limit folks moving up, we ain't all upper class, clearly, but to sit there and say "the middle class is a myth" when there is a thriving small business system in the US, lots of well paid white collar jobs, plenty of blue collar money to be made with some hustle, and guess what, folks COME HERE to work, by the damned MILLIONS, ain't no one rushing to get to those communist countries due to economic security, a guaranteed roof over your head, and three squares a day. Might as well just get yourself into a prison, same end result.

The working class wasn't defined in communist countries, it was defined during the industrialisation of Britain. If you're all working class but choose whatever arbitrary metrics to try and distinguish what type of working class you are and call yourselves lower, middle and upper based on whatever you want then where's the utility in those labels?
 

Yerd

Member
The cost of housing of a middle class person is putting people in smaller homes. Those tiny homes are going to be the future for middle class houses. Pack them in to a huge neighborhood of hundreds, then suddenly you start looking like the lower class.
 

Dural

Member
I've posted this before, but the cost of college tuition has gone up at such a ridiculously high rate compared to just about everything else. Makes you wonder what the hell is going on there.

RzcQxXR.jpg



If you look at when the central banks started trying to control inflation in the late 70s, you'll also see how much that has fucked everyone over when it comes to wages. They said it would be good for wages but they've stagnated ever since.
 

Alebrije

Member
This documental shocks me how easily you can be homeless in the U.S.



There is something wrong and certainly the low middle class is becoming poor faster than ever.
 

jason10mm

Gold Member
It's pretty simple. Stuff that can be outsourced to third world sweat shops got cheaper. Stuff that could be "luxurized" without impact on demand got crazy expensive. College is a good example. They could charge a high cost and still have slots filled by international students or students willing to take out loans. Colleges became bloated with a bunch of "lifestyle" deans and faculty, the "experience" took precedence over academic rigor, and no one cares how well the student does once they graduate. Hospital treatments are almost nothing like they were 20 years ago, the pharmaceuticals and level of care even a modest community hospital has (MRI, advanced cancer treatments, etc) is amazing. There is no upper limit on health care costs, particularly if you pair it with the incredibly destructive lifestyle choices we allow and even condone ("Fat is healthy!!").
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
I've posted this before, but the cost of college tuition has gone up at such a ridiculously high rate compared to just about everything else. Makes you wonder what the hell is going on there.

RzcQxXR.jpg



If you look at when the central banks started trying to control inflation in the late 70s, you'll also see how much that has fucked everyone over when it comes to wages. They said it would be good for wages but they've stagnated ever since.
Eyeballing it, it looks like tuition is about +175%. Using a compounded interest calculator, that is approximately 5.1% growth per year for 20 years.

To give people an idea of compounded growth over 20 years:

1% per year = +22%
2% per year = +48%
3% per year = +80%
4% per year = +119%
5% per year = +165%
6% per year = +220%
8% per year = +366%
10% per year = +572%

 

Amory

Member
i think it's mostly just mountains of debt. the average middle class family has what, 80-90k household income, a house that they rent or own with a relatively large mortgage and 2 financed or leased cars. then you pile on whatever credit card and student loan debts they've accrued

there's a reason millions of people have turned Dave Ramsey into some kind of finance demigod. he's not, but he knows his audience and their books don't look good.
 
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