Money Matters
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I thought that this was an interesting article I just came across about the lack of savings with the upper middle class.
http://qz.com/520414/the-high-earning-poor/??utm_source=parIC&cid=sf01002 Two thoughts:
- Really quite scary, because by the age of 55, there is A LOT of catching up to do in a short amount of time if you don't have much for retirement already.
- The article classifies the upper middle class with starting at ~$55k. In my HCOL area, that number seems really difficult to classify as "upper"... Even the upper tier, $74-100k, can be a bit of a stretch if student loans, home/rent, auto, daycare, insurance, etc. are all a factor.
Thoughts?
Re: High-Earning Poor
As for $55,000, in my small rural hometown, that would certainly be upper middle class. However, in my current LCOL city and surrounding suburbs, a family with two working parents making that amount would find it hard to afford the rent/mortgage, food, utilities and day care, and consistently save for retirement. That amount equates to approximately $13 an hour per person, which while livable here, it certainly isn't luxurious nor would there be much, if any, room in a typical budget for savings or debt payoff.
The most surprising part of this article for me was the non-retirement savings part. We're working on our retirement while carrying some debt, so the debt ratios were no surprise, but I'm shocked how many people don't have even $1,000 in a liquid savings account for emergencies.
BAW, ok that is just ridiculously excessive and poor planning/money management.
When I read the article, the point that really stuck out to me was the lower bracket that a household at "upper middle class" is considered. Even with good money management and realatively low debt (i.e.: not a $800k house and brand new cars), it can definitely be a struggle. Throw in no savings/emergency funds with keeping up with the Jonses and you wind up with a good percent of older workers with no retirement plan. I guess I'm not saying anything but that it just freaks me out... Especially adding in also that the current state of social security management is not working/sustainable