The standard of living is going down for the average American

In summary: Health care costs have been rising faster than general inflation for the last few decades, and they are projected to continue to rise faster than general inflation for the foreseeable future.In summary, according to the article, average American's standard of living has been improving, but this is mostly due to the fact that housing prices have been on the rise. Cost of health care, education, and other costs are projected to continue to rise faster than general inflation, and this is why many people in the US are feeling financially squeezed.
  • #71
Ghost117 said:
Yep, it still says a lot I think.
.
Consider one group that makes $10 and gets a $1 increase. Their increase is not going to show on a graph that includes a group that makes $10000 and gets a $1000 increase. Yet both increased 10%.
 
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  • #72
russ_watters said:
Since 1967, the second quintile's income has risen an average of $96 per year. That's .34% per year or 16% over the entire timeperiod.

I don't understand how you're pointing to an increase of $96/year for a quarter of the population (and it's probably even lower for the lowest quintile) and calling it " long-term gains"... If a child requires vitamins a, b, and c to survive, and you increase his vitamin supply from just a, to include b, you've doubled his vitamin variety, but the child is still going to die without c. If we take your argument and apply it here, the child should just thank us for doubling his nutrition, right up until the day he dies, and be happy for it. (Morbid example, yes, but the point is that percentages have to be taken in qualitative context, they're meaningless otherwise.)

I accidentally let the article get away with that in my last post. The article says "persistent decline in the middle class' standard of living". Not rising as fast as expected (who's expectation?) is still rising, not falling. The article contradicts itself.

You may disagree with the following statement, but it's not an internal contradiction. They did justify it in the article (which you said you didn't want to read fully): "Where a single earner could support a middle class family in the generation after World War II, it now took at least two earners. "

Pythagorean said:
.
Consider one group that makes $10 and gets a $1 increase. Their increase is not going to show on a graph that includes a group that makes $10000 and gets a $1000 increase. Yet both increased 10%.

I've responded to this above, Russ made the same case.
 
  • #73
But that's a different argument...
 
  • #74
Is it really? Ok then, in that case I'll just withdraw because we clearly can't even agree on definitions of what constitutes "long term gain"... So for me to argue here is basically pointless.
 
  • #75
Your argument is that the gains are insufficient for the quality of life, not that there were no gains. If you clearly stated that from the beginning we could discuss that.
 
  • #76
Pythagorean said:
Your argument is that the gains are insufficient for the quality of life, not that there were no gains. If you clearly stated that from the beginning we could discuss that.

I posted an article which made this very clear, (I think at least), right in the beginning.

In any case, you guys can argue about what constitutes a "long term gain" for your countrymen. I'm not American so I'll leave you people to decide that for yourselves.
 
  • #77
Ghost117 said:
I don't understand how you're pointing to an increase of $96/year for a quarter of the population (and it's probably even lower for the lowest quintile) and calling it " long-term gains"...
If the numbers go up, they are "gains". If they go down, they are "declines". The article claimed a "decline" when, in fact, there is a gain.

Words have meanings -- people are not entitled to just toss them around willy-nilly. You (or, rather, the writer of the article) can't cite a gain and call it a decline. That's just dishonest.

[separate post]
I posted an article which made this very clear, (I think at least), right in the beginning.
The article claimed a "decline" in its thesis statement. So it was clear to me that the main point of the article was to discuss a decline. Turns out, the theis statement is predicated on a faleshood.

You are mixing-and matching, but if what you really want to talk about is not enough gain, I'd probably be willing to discuss it. But do you honestly not see the difference between a "decline" and "not enough gain"? One is a positive number and the other negative!

This is really bizarre to me.
You may disagree with the following statement, but it's not an internal contradiction. They did justify it in the article (which you said you didn't want to read fully): "Where a single earner could support a middle class family in the generation after World War II, it now took at least two earners. "
That's a different issue entirely. Yes, women don't get to be housewives anymore if families want to continue to see rising standards of living.

...though the "at least" bit made me laugh.
 
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  • #78
russ_watters said:
You (or, rather, the writer of the article) can't cite a gain and call it a decline. That's just dishonest.

For the record, i said "almost zero growth" for the bottom half, so i think my words were quite apt and honest, considering your own figure of $96/year increase in their income...

The article claimed a "decline" in its thesis statement.

Yes, in the standard of living. Case in point:

Yes, women don't get to be housewives anymore if families want to continue to see rising standards of living.

Incorrect. Not "continue to see rising standards" but to maintain the same standards this class had after WWII, that's what this example was pointing out, and it has done that quite clearly. That's the decline, but apparently according to you that's a separate argument entirely... Fine, whatever, have fun convincing your own people.

if what you really want to talk about is not enough gain, I'd probably be willing to discuss it.

Like I said, I'm not an american and this is stuff you people have to figure out for yourselves.
 
  • #79
PAllen said:
I see a fundamental difficulty trying to relate changes in "real household income" as defined by various bodies to changes in 'standard of living'. If a smartphone didn't exist in 1989 (at any cost), and a median household has at least one smartphone now (not sure if this true, but seems plausible; change median to appropriate quartile if not true), how do you compare standard of living? What is the 'weight' of a smartphone? You could make a ridiculous claim that it is infinite because it could not be had at any price in 1989.

Surely there is a stat for the spread in "Real Household income". The larger the spread, the larger a group of "worse off" households. To your point how do you quantify the "standard of living" for average Jane 'n Joe of 2015 to average Jane 'n Joe of 1970? Do we not have to use the value of how they compared to their peers at that time? I don't think there is a question with respect to quality of goods 'n services; but to that of life. I'd suspect this to be housing, education and health in the context of "household income".

Though that would mean a homeless person with nothing 2015 is worse off than a homeless person with nothing in 1970.

to flip the smartphone comparative around, some guy just offered me 10,000 "car phones" from 1970 for free! Those things are like 4k piece! Far more fancy than some smartphone that can be had for $100, in 1970's dollars that's about $16.25. (using Canadian inflation valued with CPI).

Anyways, for those "car phones" I'm now selling, after adjusting to 2015 dollars they can be had for a mere $24,600. So if the OP thinks cell phones are on credit today...

So maybe the standard of living has to someway weigh the value of hundreds of hours of tap tap tapping angrybirds & cat vids, not the smartphone itself.
 
  • #80
Ghost117 said:
For the record, i said "almost zero growth" for the bottom half, so i think my words were quite apt and honest,
You posted the article with no comment at all, initially. It was natural for me to assume that you agreed with its thesis.
Yes, in the standard of living.
Based on the citation of income, and an attempt to make it look like incomes were decreasing, it seemed reasonable to me that the intent was to tie income to standard of living: to support the claim of a decrease in standard of living by making it seem like income was decreasing.
Incorrect. Not "continue to see rising standards" but to maintain the same standards this class had after WWII, that's what this example was pointing out, and it has done that quite clearly.
So is this a new claim you are making? That's the first time the word "maintain" has appeared here. So be clear:
1. Are you claiming that standard of living is stagnating?
2. Are you claiming that to maintain a stable standard of living requires rising income?
3. Are you claiming that standard of living is rising because household incomes are rising, which in part is due to women bringing income into the household?

What you are saying is vague. It implies several possibilities, most of which are false.
That's the decline, but apparently according to you that's a separate argument entirely...
What is the decline? A "decline" is a negative number. Show me the negative number you are referring to.

The why of how the data is changing is a different discussion than just citing and accepting the data. I seem to be having a hard time getting people to accept data at face value. I'm really not sure why it is so difficult.
 
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  • #81
russ_watters said:
But that's the problem: even the part in red is just a story. It isn't very well tied to real data.

They don't match because the article is two years old and thus missing two years of inflation adjustments.

More to the point, the article does the same cherry-picking of timeframes many people do to try to make the situation look worse than it is, as we saw earlier in the thread. I lose trust in people very quickly when they are dishonest with me. It makes it hard to even read the rest of the article.

I can't wait until the 2014 income data comes out in September, when people will have to stop trotting-out the insulting/misleading comparison to 1989.

I repeat, I don know how to use multiquotes, which makes it harder for me to address points in an effective way.

What is insulting to me is for you to :
1) Insult me after I stated I was most likely leaving. Send me a PM telling me you think I am dishonest so I can give my side.
2) Continuing to accuse me of doing a comparison to 1989 I _clearly stated_ I did not know why I was using 1989 as a benchmark, where I agree I have no basis , then start bringing up data --by quintiles -- from 1967 to 2013. I never brought up 1989 after that, but now you keep bringing it up. How fair is that? Who's doing the misrepresentation? and then have you accuse me of changing the goalpost, _because I am bringing up more detailed data_ . And, of course, you do not even consider the possibility that you may have misinterpreted something; you start accusing me of being dishonest instead .

_I told you I did not know how to use multiquotes_.
Instead of showing me how to do it, you keep trashing me _ for not addressing your points clearly or one-by-one... after I told you I was most likely leaving this thread_ .Apparently more detailed data represents goalshifting to you.. And maybe _you_ should read my posts more carefully , specially after accusing me of not reading your posts carefully-enough.

And how about your handwaving on your assumption of upward mobility and lack of job security; you state that income distribution is dynamic, which it is : still, how likely are you to move upward/downward ? Do the two cancel each other out? if the probability is low, then the static description of income is a good approximation.

Do you want me to give you a clearer description of what I am referring to?

_ It is extremely hard for me to do so because I don't know how to use multiquotes_

_ I don't know how to use multiquotes_ ; they seem to be disabled.
And you ignored the fact that job security is not a choice anymore . Do you believe most people would choose to change jobs if they could choose job safety instead ( assuming similar pay/job conditions )? Most people are risk-averse, preferring a known situation than just-about any unknown.

EDIT 1Maybe you should look into yourself some more and stop trashing anyone you believe is not acting as they should.

EDIT2 : And you left out a big one in your favor: the existence of the Internet itself and the access to just-about -everything it gives to anyone with access to it .
 
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  • #82
WWGD said:
I repeat, I don know how to use multiquotes, which makes it harder for me to address points in an effective way.
WWGD, you do not have to use multiquotes... just copy and past from the post you're replying too, highlight the text and click the plus sign, then click quote...

Plus sign.JPG

I repeat, I don know how to use multiquotes, which makes it harder for me to address points in an effective way.
What is insulting to me is for you to :
1) Insult me after I stated I was most likely leaving. Send me a PM telling me you think I am dishonest so I can give my side.

Or... highlight the text from the post you're replying to, and click reply...
WWGD said:
2) Continuing to accuse me of doing a comparison to 1989 I _clearly stated_ I did not know why I was using 1989 as a benchmark, where I agree I have no basis , then start bringing up data --by quintiles -- from 1967 to 2013. I never brought up 1989 after that, but now you keep bringing it up. How fair is that? Who's doing the misrepresentation? and then have you accuse me of changing the goalpost, _because I am bringing up more detailed data_ . And, of course, you do not even consider the possibility that you may have misinterpreted something; you start accusing me of being dishonest instead .

Or... do the same as above and delete the post number and member number... ( " post: 5027229, member: 69719" )

You get...
WWGD said:
_I told you I did not know how to use multiquotes_.
Instead of showing me how to do it, you keep trashing me _ for not addressing your points clearly or one-by-one... after I told you I was most likely leaving this thread_ .

Or put them in by hand...
_ I don't know how to use multiquotes_ ; they seem to be disabled.
 
  • #83
WWGD said:
What is insulting to me is for you to :
1) Insult me after I stated I was most likely leaving.
I was referring to your source, not you. I'm quite willing to believe that your source deceived you into believing something that isn't true. On this issue in particular, people hear it a lot and start believing it.
2) Continuing to accuse me of doing a comparison to 1989...
Nothing else in the post you quoted had anything to do with you. I was quite content to let you leave. The comparison to 1989 remains relevantly irrelevant because it was brought-up again by someone else in another article. It seems to be a popular misrepresentation.
_I told you I did not know how to use multiquotes_.
Instead of showing me how to do it...
I do it manually by typing-in the html tag: hit "quote" for the post, then type them in manually where you want the breaks. But in either case, you didn't ask for help!
And how about your handwaving on your assumption of upward mobility and lack of job security...
I grow tired of being the only one who is responsible for posting data. That one also wasn't my claim and it isn't an issue I consider very relevant here, so I decided not to put any more effort into it than was put into bringing it here: it was hand-waved in my direction, so I hand-waved it away.
...you state that income distribution is dynamic, which it is : still, how likely are you to move upward/downward ? Do the two cancel each other out? if the probability is low, then the static description of income is a good approximation.
us-total-money-income-distribution-by-age-2012.png

And you ignored the fact that job security is not a choice anymore . Do you believe most people would choose to change jobs if they could choose job safety instead ( assuming similar pay/job conditions )? Most people are risk-averse, preferring a known situation than just-about any unknown.
Yes, most people are risk averse, so your assumption is begging the question: people don't change jobs on purpose because they want a lateral move with the same pay, they do it because it is a good way to move up.

Since this still isn't a point I brought up, I'm still going to let someone else do their own research on it (for now, at least).
 
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  • #84
russ_watters said:
Yes, most people are risk averse, so your assumption is begging the question: people don't change jobs on purpose because they want a lateral move with the same pay, they do it because it is a good way to move up.

Since this still isn't a point I brought up, I'm still going to let someone else do their own research on it (for now, at least).
[sigh] Who am I kidding: I care about knowing. Here's a graph:

notes-dec10-tenure-fig1.jpg


And an article:
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/americans-less-likely-to-change-jobs-now-than-in-1980s-2014-01-10

Bottom line: I hadn't looked into this issue in a while (like I said, not something I care much about) and as it turns-out, people are sticking with jobs longer than they did 10 years ago. Looks like a lot of that is related to recessions, but there does seem to be an overall upward trend, albeit over a relatively short timeframe. And according to economists, lower turnover is a bad thing:
A high “churn” rate is typically seen as a reflection of a healthy economy. “People are holding on to their jobs not because they want to, but because they don’t have as much opportunity as they once did,”
See, here's the thing: unless an employee sucks, or the company isn't doing well, there is no reason to fire them. It costs a lot of money to hire and train new workers and it's a gamble. So "job security" is mostly the choice of the workers, not the companies they work for.

As the economy continues to improve, though, we should expect turnover to rise. And probalby a lot: there are a lot of unhappy workers who want to change jobs but haven't due to the recession. Expect that pent-up frustration to cause high turnover.
 
  • #85
This thread started with an OP that made claims without citing any facts or sources and hasn't really improved since, despite my and a few others' efforts to tie it to reality. As repeated requests for people taking-up the OP's argument to make explicit and fact-supported arguments have failed to improve it, it is therefore locked.
 
  • #86
I have done further cleanup of posts.
 

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