- Oct 9, 1999
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http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/dail...orse-off-than-the-numbers-show-181906188.html
I've wondered about this for some time, and now an article shows up showing that the gains at the top are skewing the averages (but not the medians) of the middle class....the declining middle class.
Wow, middle class looks great in that respect.....but wait, there's more...much more....
Well shit, there went my sunshine....
Bah, they are wrong. There is no way that we are declining, especially after gaining 6 million McService jobs. I demand an investigation.....get those people back in here...turn those machines back on...turn those machines back on!!! (from Trading Places).
I've wondered about this for some time, and now an article shows up showing that the gains at the top are skewing the averages (but not the medians) of the middle class....the declining middle class.
The "average" American worker earns about $44,000 per year and saves around 4% of his income. And the "average" household has a net worth of approximately $710,000, including the value of homes, investments, bank accounts and so on. But many Americans, needless to say, fall well below those benchmarks, which fail to capture widespread financial distress
Wow, middle class looks great in that respect.....but wait, there's more...much more....
The rich have always skewed wealth and income data to some extent, since they pull up averages and make ordinary people seem a bit better off than they really are. But the outsized gains of the super-rich during the past 25 years have become so disproportionate that some measures of prosperity may be losing their relevance. When wealth and income are as concentrated as they are, examining the average consumer or average investor makes little sense, economists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch wrote in a recent report.
Well shit, there went my sunshine....
The homeownership rate has been declining since 2004 and now stands at 65%; some economists expect it to keep falling. The percentage of Americans who own stocks has been falling, too, and is close to a record low. So fewer people have been taking advantage of a housing recovery and a long bull market in stocks, which is how a growing amount of wealth is being concentrated among fewer people.
Average income has been increasing, dragged upward by the mushrooming paydays of the 1%. But median income, which represents the midpoint in the distribution of income, has been falling. Median household income, adjusted for inflation, is now about $53,000, according to Sentier Research. Thats about 7% lower than it was in 2000 one sure sign middle class living standards have declined.
Bah, they are wrong. There is no way that we are declining, especially after gaining 6 million McService jobs. I demand an investigation.....get those people back in here...turn those machines back on...turn those machines back on!!! (from Trading Places).