Most people can not "save money" in todays world in America.
You can't get rich working for someone else. it never happens.
And the hits that come your way in daily life make it impossible to get ahead of the game let alone actually "save money".
Take 2008. People with retirement investments in the market were nearly wiped out. People lost their job. Companies closed.
Was that the average Joe's fault?
No, it was the faults within the system and how rigged the system is against average Joe.
People live paycheck to paycheck with both dad and mom needing to work just to stay in the game. Who even thinks about getting ahead?
And this attack on the lower, middle and upper middle class is now worse than ever. And all because of stupidity and GREED within the government and within our institutions not to mention from our law makers in Washington. The average Joe and his family are being set up to take even more severe hits. More severe than ever before. With our leaders ignoring and denying climate change, the storms will be greater and cleanup costs after those storms will be outrageous. And who will pay the bills for that cleanup? As always, Mr and Mrs average Joe and their family.
Then take the banks, they are still at it. Figuring out ways to screw the public out of money by shady financial practices and activity that should be deemed criminal, yet they still do it. 2008 did not change anything. No lessons learned. And it doesn't help when the politicians refuse to do anything about the greed. They actually help it along by eliminating regulations and protections. Is it any wonder that Donald Trump and his administration would cut regulations allowing more corruption, given that Donald Trump himself is the most corrupt and greedy of them all?
Trump built an empire on cheating people and cheating the system, so naturally they dislike any regulation that perfects Mr average Joe.
Is it bad? Yes, it is bad. And it will get much more worse.
The American family will shoulder all the burden and pay out of pocket for all the failures and greed from poor leadership and poor management from the top.
We will have great depressions and great recessions which average Joe will be forced to pay for.
The banks and wall street will become even more greedy than 2008, and average Joe will have to pay for that too one way or the other.
So don't blame the middle class or blame average Joe for not saving money. They can't. It is impossible.
The system is against them. They have been left out in the cold.
Trump promised average Joe a tax cut, but instead handed average Joe an even higher tax bill in the end.
GET AHEAD? Are you serious?
The middle class are the ones always stuck paying for all the failures of government, politics, and wall street.
The system is rigged and rigged in such a way that poor Mr and Mrs average Joe can never get ahead let alone prepare for their future.
Put the blame where it belongs.
On our politicians, on our failed leadership, and on the greed.
It's a pity we all swallowed the American Dream Myth, but it was easy to swallow 60 years ago after Roosevelt had reset things to mildly favor the average Joe. There had never been a time in our history before or since when the Geni Index showed the broadest distribution of income and wealth. Labor unions had clout, because unions were more pervasive with greater membership.
But I turn to the basic notion of Jonathan Swift's "Modest Proposal" -- a satire suggesting that the solution to famine and growing population was eating babies. You can't save much especially if you have a family. Oddly, that better time in the fifties preceded the advent of reliably effective birth control.
It works like this. There are only so many squares on the chessboard of life, each with a different value and different future prospects. You get the one you were born on, first of all. It takes energy to jump from one square to another, no different than the way things work in quantum physics. You can jump from square to square, and statistically you may wear yourself out. You do not get rich by humping a day job.
With the wealth you might accumulate in a day job ("wealth" is an overstatement), you won't likely get rich day-trading. You only think you will, just like Trump thinks that he can score big at the Black Jack tables for his intuition and despite his poor memory or ignorance of card-counting. Once in a while, someone may get lucky. Maybe even win the lottery. But the odds are against it.
You could be Howard Schultz. What did he do, coming from a working-class family? He didn't even pursue a journalistic career in his college major, but landed a position in middle-management. Yet, that wasn't the square for his great success. He just started three barista bars. He chose to start those barista bars! He chose that square to land on, even as most people would first think of the Pakistani immigrant on the street corner with a stand mixing Lattes for passersby. Not a particularly glamorous vision, but Schultz did it, and grew into Starbucks.
You can save money slowly if you manage your subsistence yellow crumbs like an unrelenting accountant. You can help yourself by avoiding leaks in your stocks and flows for payment of interest. But you'll never likely buy a house without paying interest. You will likely buy a used car to avoid paying interest.
I can pontificate about these things. Many people have posted blogs about quitting their $100,000/annum jobs and moving their family to the country to live on $25,000/year, perhaps later supplemented by a business in the home. But most people can't train their mind enough to adopt that discipline. The less you have and the less you get, the shorter the timespan of a future that you imagine.
You can say that people have their own responsibility -- their self-reliance -- to manage. According to that view, we live in a jungle anyway, and your lack of reward is your own fault. But that ignores such chance misfortunes as catastrophic illness, or losing your job because a major bank took a dump during the last recession. You cannot be expected to predict the Mistakes of the Manipulators.
And when I pontificate, I fail to account for the fact that I have Milton Friedman's "Permanent Income". I'm retired. I'm "funded". People who go out into the world and work for a living don't have permanent anything. So they get payday loans, looking from one month to the next to keep the transitory income coming in.
Even small businessmen make mistakes because they're under the same pressure. They might incline to cheat a customer to obtain more income in the short run, as they fail to see how the satisfied customer may come back with a stream of income in the future for not being cheated.