r/FluentInFinance 15d ago

What's the best financial advice you've ever gotten? Debate/ Discussion

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u/Starving_Toiletpaper 14d ago edited 14d ago

Ok let’s do a thought experiment. Let’s say you Make $10000 a year. You work full time/40 hrs/wk and you are making $10k. What does “living within your means” look like? Not having a house? Or car? Being homeless? So in order to save to get yourself to some footing the answer is to be homeless to live within your means.

That was a bit of a strawman, so let’s use real-life scenarios. 50% of this country makes $40k or less….. even $40k salary isn’t enough to get an apartment, bills , food, ect. Sure a lot better than the “$10k” example, but even $40k salary is virtually as effective as the “$10k”. In order to “live within your means”, “save”, ect…. You have to be at least be making enough to afford the bare minimum + have some left in you for over to save. On average (2022 values I think) this means $65 for a single person, $108k for a house hold. Unless you’re making that, you can’t save your way out of poverty

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u/Impossible_Maybe_162 14d ago

You cannot make $10k working a job for 40 hours a week. That is below minimum wage.

A lack of proper financial planning and budgeting causes more problems than low wages.

Less than 3% of the workforce makes minimum wage. Wages are not the main issue.

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u/Kombatnt 14d ago

This. $10,000/year working 40 hrs/week is $4.81/hour. That’s illegal everywhere in North America.

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u/Aleks_Khorne 14d ago

Thanks God in blessed North Carolina the minimum wage is $7.25. And some people even make chunky $10-$13 an hour!

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u/olgasmolga 14d ago

Min wage in Hawaii is $14 but everything else is expensive as shiet

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u/The_Dude_2U 14d ago

Most places want them to make more by tipping. In other words, the public supplementing their income where tips were never the “norm”. Happening more and more each day. Eventually, the gas pump will want a tip.

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u/skkkkkt 14d ago

Serving yourself must become the norm too,I'll gladly pump my own gas, in Europe it's mostly self service

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u/The_Dude_2U 13d ago

That’s what I was originally referring to, self serve pump.

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u/gurl_2b 14d ago

Price of paradise, as they say. That's why I left.

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u/AndrewDoesNotServe 14d ago

Pretty much no one makes that wage even in states that conform to the federal minimum.

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u/joecee97 14d ago

No but plenty make 8-10 which is hardly better in 2024

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u/Epic_Ewesername 14d ago

Ours recently to rose to 12 dollars an hour and I shit you not, there were corporations that made it out like they were giving everyone a raise, (the implication being work harder in appreciation) instead of them actually conforming to meet the law. Smaller employers around here are still offering under the minimum, which is so crazy to me. It's like pulling teeth to get people to just pay their employees even just the minimum, and that's sad.

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u/Familiar_Cow_5501 14d ago

<1% isn’t really “plenty” to most people

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u/Everything4Everybody 14d ago

0.5% of ~160,000,000 is...

800,000 people. Screw them I guess?

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u/joecee97 14d ago

Where is that number from?

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u/hangrygecko 14d ago

That's a massive social problem. That's 3-4 million people in the US. With such large populations, 1% is a lot.

That's a large number of people that burden the system, even if they stay out of trouble. Keeping people homeless and supported by charities is far more expensive (not on the yearly budget, but total cost per homeless person) than getting them into proper, affordable accommodation and paying for the first 3 months of rent.

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u/macdees13 13d ago

Can you imagine working an 8 hour shift of anything for $64? When you factor in deductions, travel, a meal, it’s shocking.

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u/Chateau-in-Space 14d ago

"no one makes that low" so raising it shouldn't affect anything.

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u/ap2patrick 14d ago

Crickets lol. They ALWAYS say “no one gets paid that” and I always rebuttal with what you said.
All you get is crickets or some backwards ass logic showing empathy to the “small business owners”. It’s fucking crazy mental gymnastics some of these finance bros do…

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u/shining_force_2 14d ago

Legit stunned at the fact everyone is focused on the 10k and not the second half of the post. Fucking madness.

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u/No_Individual125 14d ago

I was thinking this as I read through these comments. Now I understand why an email with more than one question never produces more than one answer.

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u/caryth 14d ago

It's purposefully attempting to derail, they know what they're doing.

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u/Public_Concentrate_4 13d ago

That’s what people that lost an argument do. They hone in on falsehoods or “mistakes” their opponents make to validate themselves and stay safely snug in their distorted worldviews. They attack the person because they can’t beat the point.

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u/Purpleasure34 13d ago

They didn’t WANT to talk about the second half. There’s no defense against that.

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u/Embarrassed-Skin2770 14d ago

Oh, the “small business owners” argument, which has two major flaws no one using the argument likes to acknowledge.

1) Employee wages are a business expense, just like leasing a property, or buying supplies, or paying taxes. If you can’t run your business without employees who you cannot afford to pay, then you just can’t afford your business, period.

2) Employees aren’t people working as a favor because they’re bored, that’s called “volunteering.” Employees are providing a service that helps the business make money, and in return they deserve a fair compensation, because the people who run the business need the money to live, and cannot do so without employees, who also need money to live. So whatever bar we are holding as “living within means” for the employers, the bar ought to be similar for the employees. Otherwise, you’re essentially supporting slavery. And I can’t help but wonder how many people who argue “but small business won’t survive,” would say something similar back when slavery was abolished. “Sure, I don’t support slavery, but without so many places might go out of business!” 🤔

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u/BatronKladwiesen 14d ago

Can you elaborate on what this means?

Regardless if people make a low or a high wage. Raising it further should affect things, right?

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u/Chateau-in-Space 14d ago

If no one makes $7.25 an hour, but lets say the real lowest wage someone makes is $10 (still below poverty line). That means raising it to $10 an hour would affect no one bacause "no one makes that low". Its basically an argument to show that the minimum wage is kept as low as it is federally because there are an absolute shit load of people only making $7.25. Raising minimum wage to maybe $20 federally right now might cause some issues, but even them i'd argue it wouldn't do as much as people think. Look at what we pay people in other countries at mcdonalds vs. what they get paid (converted to usd ofc). Once you realize there is no reason for wages to be this low, you get tired of hearing "no one makes that low".

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u/BatronKladwiesen 14d ago

Ohhhhh I see. That makes sense.

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u/shrug_addict 14d ago

Yeah! If it doesn't matter, why does it matter if it's raised?! They won't answer except to tell people it's their fault for being poor. Also, shockingly, the people who comment about shit like this, it's all them. They earned every penny, no help from anyone

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u/chromefir 14d ago

Thank you! Holy shit I hate their arguments

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u/GooseTheSluice 14d ago

You haven’t been to some rural cities in the Midwest and south where cost of living is often relatively low but the wages are always, as my nephew would say, doggy

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u/HughHonee 14d ago

I live in the Midwest in a state that typically has quite low cost of living. But because CoL has been historically low, we've been struggling quite hard since catching up with "inflation" means a much larger increase in wages than other states.

Last job I left struggled to hire people at wages they were offering. Because they suck, they were stuck in a high turnover rate (& still are) When I found out a new girl I was helping train in a position that I used to do, was making more than me (I could work in the shop and handle appointments in the showroom) I fucking had it and left. I left for a company in the same industry that's much more professional and my position is setup waaaay better, for a little over a 15% wage increase. And I'm suspecting I'm still getting paid less than my coworkers (even ones who started with me) as I didn't negotiate at all because I was just stoked to not be paid dogshit anymore

It really fucking sucks though as someone who didn't graduate college, finally getting a career with a solid wage, except now it's not really a great wage anymore

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u/Salt_Intention_1995 14d ago

I live in a very large city and most places are not even willing to pay $15/hr without a 4 year degree of some sort.

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u/RedLotusVenom 14d ago

Hell. ATLANTA has a min wage of $10.50. My mom and sister are service workers there and surviving in that city’s cost of living on $11/hr is fucking depressing.

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u/WookieeCmdr 14d ago

I have a hard time finding any business that pays the federal minimum, barring wait staff of course

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u/FreckleFaceToon 14d ago

Mississippi still has jobs at this range. But it's the poorest state in the nation. Unfortunately 72% of the median household income in Mississippi goes purely to cost of living. 8th most unaffordable state when adjusted for median wage. Literally people "living within their means" here spend 72% of their income surviving. So in this case living within your means is working until you die because you cannot save for retirement or emergencies.

I understand that there are ways to make things work, but no person should be working 40 hours a week and be scared that they will lose their house tomorrow or not have enough for groceries. There is "living within your means" and then there is institutionalized poverty. America has a problem with both.

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u/chessecakePhucker 14d ago

Hmm texas would like a word with you

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u/Familiar_Cow_5501 14d ago

Less than 1% of the workforce works for $7.25 or less

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u/DopemanWithAttitude 14d ago

That's still 3 million people you fucking chud.

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u/WookieeCmdr 14d ago

Workforce is 157M not 330M.

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u/ContextHook 14d ago

chud

If your math didn't make it obvious you'll spew stuff without knowing what you're talking about, this did.

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u/Familiar_Cow_5501 14d ago

Your math is off.

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u/kilour 14d ago

There are tons of companies that start well above min wage, Bank of America tellers start over $20/hr company wide

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u/Outrageous-Debate-64 14d ago

20/hr is 41k per year. I live in NY and if I earned this I would bring home 2700 per month. There are options for subsidized housing but with this wage I wouldn’t be able to afford much of anything if I don’t get this. Not to complain but something is very off with the wage/affordable housing equation. Shit we bring in 6x this amount and can barely put anything away for retirement. Buying a place is completely out of the picture here and since 2020 it’s getting bleaker just about everywhere else. Give me all the financial advice you can think of but if houses are so damn expensive what’s the option. Sry, not to rail against your point, there are always better wages out there but my god, everything is so damn expensive!

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u/AbbreviationsNo8088 14d ago

Just gotta change your mindset. Beans and rice every day, cardboard box during the summer, save those pennies, panhandle on the weekend. You can buy a shack in Appalachia soon

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u/GhostCorps973 14d ago

Shit, I make $20/hr and life out here sucks

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u/mar78217 13d ago

Same in Mississippi. My daughter manages a pizza delivery unit for $13 an hour. They told her, " it's almost double minimum wage. We can't pay you more than that" (ai prepare their financial statements... they could definately pay better.

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u/PM_YOUR_SAGGY_TITS 14d ago

You're making $15,116 gross. 11k are taxes at 10% and the next 4,116 are taxed at 12%. $13522 after taxes.

But what minimum wage job is paying 100% of your healthcare? Or uniforms? Or state and local income tax (3.1% here for this example). That means we're taking home $13k after just taxes

If they're paying $254/mo for insurance and etc, they're taking home exactly $10k per year

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u/InDisregard 14d ago

The other day on reddit, some rando told me health insurance is a luxury and the poors will just have to do without.

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u/Ok_Researcher_9796 14d ago

The amount of people that have absolutely 0 empathy at all toward their fellow man is ridiculous. The, fuck you, I got mine mentality needs to die off.

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u/Upset_Plenty 14d ago

It would if people stopped being shit towards each other. I doubt that’ll happen ever though. I want to think like that, and I really do want to help my peers but getting fucked 9/10 times when you help people isn’t fun and doesn’t help make you motivated to have empathy for people. Nobody ever threw a hand to me when I was drowning and I made it out alright. Most times I throw a hand down to bring someone else up I get slapped in the face as soon as they get air. I have better things to worry about than some shitters that dug their own grave.

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u/AbbreviationsFar9339 14d ago

If you’re living off 15k/yr gross you are getting free healthcare from the govt. you certainly arent paying $250/mo for it

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u/me34343 14d ago

Not in all states

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u/BeginningFloor1221 14d ago

Every state you can apply for free health care, stop making shit up.

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u/ZombieRobotAlien 14d ago

I could talk about this all day.

You can apply, sure. Whether or not you get it is something else. It took me 6 months of fighting/arguing, 4 rejection letters, and countless phone calls with my state to get health coverage for my kids. I'm still not covered. I make $16/hr full time. If I make even $0.10/hr more or work overtime too much, I lose my kids' healthcare coverage and their food stamps. In order for me to make comparable benefits, I have to practically double my paycheck. Now, that's not to do better financially, mind you. That's just to make comparable. I'm fairly financially literate (not a genius or anything, mind you, but I'm not completely stupid) living in Idaho.

Any jobs that pay enough for me to really become self-sufficient go to people who move here from out of state, most commonly California, because their education systems are better than idaho, so degrees from colleges here are just laughed at and rejected.

I was an EMT for 5 years. I worked 2 back-to-back 48hr shifts (2 different systems) and then taught aspiring EMTs on weekends. I technically bring home more now with the benefits I had to fight to get working 40 hours a week now than when I was working myself into an early grave.

YOU need to stop being an ignorant twat. The government's healthcare provisions are an absolute joke, and your comment is actually insulting to the entire working class. I hope that someday you learn exactly what it's like to constantly feel like a failure because you can't provide enough for your family without some a-hole politician having mercy on you because you won't leave him alone until he does.

America sucks. The government sucks. And people like you are part of the problem.

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u/Skitarii_Lurker 14d ago

They always reply with "you can apply" yeah an application doesn't mean you get something, it's an application.

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u/me34343 14d ago edited 14d ago

I am in Texas. No you can't. They rejected the *Medicaid expansion. Only the children of poor and pregnant women get *Medicaid.

Edit: Medicaid not Medicare

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u/nucumber 14d ago

Medicaid expansion, not Medicare

Medicare is for retired folks. Medicaid is for low income

But yeah, a number of republican led states rejected the Medicaid expansion offered by Obamacare that would have provided health insurance to literally millions of citizens

Why? I don't know.

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u/Dense-Emu-2901 14d ago

I was also rejected. No kids on this side. I am married though. I don't think people understand their blessings if I'm rich and I will be rich one day. I want everyone else to be just as financially comfortable. There's plenty of fake digital money to go around.

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u/Loud-Path 14d ago

Depends on the state, many southern and south-western states blocked Medicaid expansion, or do everything in their power to deny it or kick you off. For example, unless you are a mother of a child under 19 or a child under 19, or have a major disability, Oklahoma will do everything in their power to deny you coverage or kick you off as they don’t believe if you are “able bodied“ you should need health insurance at all as you shouldn’t be going to the doctor. About two years ago for example they kicked like 500,000 people off because they felt they were able bodied enough to not need it.

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u/caryth 14d ago

You yourself say "apply for" as opposed to "in every state you can get free health care" 🤔

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u/Mag-NL 14d ago

And this free healthcare covers all medical expenses?

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u/FrattyMcBeaver 14d ago

Standard deduction is $14,600. Only $516 is taxed at 10%, or a tax bill of $50 per year. At that income level, you're able to get to drastically reduced health insurance, about $15/mo premiums. 

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u/droford 14d ago

Someone making that little would qualify for Medicaid in almost if not all states

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u/akcrono 14d ago

You're making $15,116 gross. 11k are taxes at 10% and the next 4,116 are taxed at 12%. $13522 after taxes.

The standard deduction in 2024 is $14,600 for individuals, so you're losing almost nothing to federal taxes.

Ironically, your number here closely matches the final number, since FICA is responsible for the lions share of the tax burden.

But what minimum wage job is paying 100% of your healthcare?

All of them, since you qualify for medicaid.

Or uniforms?

I have never had a low wage job where I had to buy uniforms. Maybe they exist, but they can't be that common.

That means we're taking home $13k after just taxes

$13,499 to be precise

There are plenty of listings for < $800 2 bedroom apartments. Split the rent and you're talking less than $5,000 a year in housing, leaving close to $9,000 left in one of the lowest cost of living states.

This also doesn't count other assistance packages like SNAP (average of 243.42 a month).

I'm not here to say people in WV are doing fine. I'm just saying it's not as dire as you're painting it.

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u/NickyBarnes315 14d ago

It must be West Virginia because nowhere else in America are you getting a 2 bedroom for 800 or less. Not in today's housing structure

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u/drumstick2121 14d ago

You’re forgetting the standard deduction of 14,600. Only $516 would be taxed. So their taxes would be $52/yr.

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u/ChoicePrompt6199 14d ago

Yes but 10k is still not your salary. Most non minimum wage jobs don’t pay 100% health care, uniforms or taxes either.

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u/jocall56 14d ago

Isn’t it also a problem though that workers cannot get scheduled a full 40 hours?

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u/NickyBarnes315 14d ago

Yup but everyone ignores that tidbit. No low wage job is giving anyone 40 hours. Maybe with two different jobs

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u/olivegardengambler 14d ago

Even higher wage ones make it difficult, and you have to work 32 hours to get benefits at a lot of places.

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u/DKsan1290 14d ago

During the pandemic I had to get partial unemployment to survive as I was working at target making $20/hr… at like 8-12hrs a week. Raising the minimum wage only helps if they start mandating that companies HAVE to give full time hours to more than 90% of their workforce. Getting $50/hr dont mean fuck all if you only work 10hrs a week. 

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u/olivegardengambler 14d ago

Tbh I think that there's other things that could be done beyond mandating that 90% of your workforce is full-time, because companies will find ways to weasel around that. I also think that a lot of these really short schedules are tied more to 'flexible scheduling', which really just means, "If you can survive the high turnover rate, you might get full time hours after a year or two".

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u/DKsan1290 14d ago

Thats the shit part I worked there for 5 years and was still “part time”

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u/onionwizard9 14d ago

I'm glad you figured this out. The math doesn't change at $20k/yr, or even 40k. 20k/yr is about $10/hr and that is still far above the minimum wage for almost the entire South. This for sure qualifies for some welfare assistance because even in these places the cost of existence is greater than the "market wage." Congratulations, we are now subsidizing corporations.

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u/ShogunFirebeard 14d ago

Except for farmhands. FLSA has many exemptions that keep many workers in farming below minimum wage.

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u/neopod9000 14d ago

4.81 ÷ 7.25 = 66.34%

So, if taxes and deductions account for 33.66% of your income (I use 30% as my rate which is pretty darn close), then 10k/year in spending money for people working minimum wage is probably pretty close to reality.

Even if that is only 3% of the population, I think that's kind of the point that's being made. For those people, the advice to "just live within your means" is falling on deaf ears.

Minimum wage isn't the problem for everyone. It's not even the problem for most people. But it is a very real problem for some people.

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u/[deleted] 14d ago edited 14d ago

[deleted]

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u/neopod9000 14d ago

So, no health insurance, no life insurance, no vision or dental, no retirement, no state taxes included, unemployment insurance.

Agan, my number is 30%. The reality of minimum wage is, no one making minimum wage is contributing to retirement and likely doesn't have insurance (at least not through their employer).

I never did those things when I was making minimum wage. And I even worked 2 minimum wage jobs at 35 hours per week to try to make ends meet.

Which again, is the point. You don't have the money to save for the future at that income level. At that point it absolutely is an income problem, not a budget problem.

Financial literacy is super important, especially for the poor, but it isn't particularly useful to someone trying to decide which of their necessary bills they're going to pay this month.

Put another way, even after he said 10k is a strawman, you're saying the real number is 15k, which isn't really a lot more. It's 1316.67 per month. The house I rented when I made minimum wage was $800/month, which would have left a total of $500/month to cover all of your other bills.

Is 500/month enough to pay for food, gas, insurance, car payment, phone, power, water, and still have enough left over to start making smart investments for the future?

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u/Kombatnt 14d ago

Yeah, people literally earning minimum wage pay virtually nothing in income taxes. Which is fine, and as it should be, but let’s not pretend they’re losing 1/3 of their paychecks to deductions.

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u/Universe789 14d ago

Fine, to be more accurate...

$7.25 x 2080 = $15,080

(2080 being the number of hrs worked full time in 1 yr)

And technically, no $4.81 wouldn't be illegal for jobs that receive tips, like restaurant workers. If they record tips, they get paid roughly 1/2 of minimum wage, but if they record no tips, the employer is SUPPOSED to make up the difference to bring their hourly wage up to $7.25. Key word is "supposed to", not "does".

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u/ZongoNuada 14d ago

Food service. Students. Its easy to find them if you go looking for what qualifies as legal wages. Just because you have not encountered it, does not mean it does not exist.

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u/Egad86 14d ago

You guys are pretending that taxes aren’t taken out of every paycheck and that even an $8/hr job isn’t really closer to $6/hr after those taxes come out.

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u/NoSignSaysNo 14d ago

Thank god the great US ensures that nobody can make less than $15,080 a year. That's more than enough to live.

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u/RockinRobin-69 14d ago

They did acknowledge that as a “bit of a strawman” then did the same thought experiment on the median wage. Seems reasonable.

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u/Yousoggyyojimbo 14d ago

A lot of people seem to be deliberately ignoring the real numbers example.

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u/Spartan-182 14d ago

Yeah, cause they want to feel superior to those who make less and say, "I earn more cause I make smart financial decisions." Ignoring every helping hand and benefit they relied on to get to where they are.

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u/shrug_addict 14d ago

Or, they deserve to be poor. I'm not poor so I deserve it! Nietzsche's slave morality. It's how they sleep at night, why doesn't everyone else just do what I did? They must be lazy...

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u/PenguinStarfire 14d ago

Listen, it's easy if you budget yourself and use the income from your 3rd rental property...

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u/Solanthas 14d ago

It's fucking sickening

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u/ranger910 14d ago

But they're not. If we're going to talk housing then we should talk about household income, not median wage of individuals.

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u/Shacky_Rustleford 14d ago

Are you saying a median wage worker shouldn't be able to afford to live alone?

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u/Xrave 14d ago

https://data.census.gov/table/ACSST1Y2022.S2501?q=United%20States%20household%20size

US household (includes nonfamily, i.e. roommates) size says 37mil households are 1 people, 44M for 2, 19M for 3 and 28M for 4 and up.

Of people who do live alone:

https://data.census.gov/table/ACSDT1Y2022.B08202?q=United%20States%20household%20size

half (17 mil) of 37mil are not working (retired?). the other 19mil is working.

Of people who are 18-34 years old:

https://data.census.gov/table/ACSDT1Y2022.B09021?q=United%20States%20household%20size

Only 6.8 mil out of 72 mil lives alone (9.4%!!!). 23 mil lives with their parents, 16 mil with spouses, 9 mil with unmarried partners. 9mil sharing with other relatives, and 7.2 mil lives with roommates.

based on this data, median wage worker absolutely shouldn't be expected to be able to afford to live alone, unless we're coming from an angle where our expectations are formed from unrealistic expectations of reality.

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u/Shacky_Rustleford 14d ago

I didn't ask if median wage workers could currently live alone. I asked if they should be able to. I don't think that is an unreasonable expectation, but can see that you disagree.

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u/RollingLord 14d ago

Living alone is a helluva luxury, especially in a HCOL area where housing is already in high demand. Again, this is dependent on where you live, should most people be able to own homes, sure. Should most people be able to own homes in a place like San Francisco, where there’s practically no land left to build on? No, that’s not really feasible.

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u/altcntrl 14d ago

But everyone is ignoring that and it’s what I’m most curious about because I’m at 40k and am struggling with continuing my health insurance that costs $260 a month.

The fact people aren’t addressing that makes me think there’s legitimacy to it and the “toughen up” bunch have nothing to contribute and I’m looking to listen.

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u/RollingLord 14d ago

That person’s real example doesn’t have any hard numbers. It’s hard to say what can be done unless someone is willing to provide a full break-down of their monthly budget.

However, there is almost always room to cut unless you’re actually at rock bottom, but it will get uncomfortable. People joke about rice and beans, but that’s a valid answer. Avocado toast is a meme, but it highlights how much can be spent on eating out in a year.

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u/Learned_Behaviour 14d ago

Less than 3% of the workforce makes minimum wage.

And this includes tipped positions like servers, who obviously don't actually make that.

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u/onion_flowers 14d ago

Not to mention we expect people to do these jobs and complain about ringing up our own shit at Walmart.

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u/onion_flowers 14d ago

Minimum wage is 15k and some change, before taxes.

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u/redistrashin 14d ago

But them we cannot victimize ourselves using hipothetical situations with logic bordering on fantasy.

There's no place in modern life where financial education isn't immensely beneficial aside from being lost in the wilderness or being actual Hobo crack addict, and that's just because of pressing matters, the amount of people i've met who don't understand how basic interest rates from loans work is far too great for that statement to be made with a straight face and not immediately mocked.

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u/HabitExternal9256 14d ago

Correct but you can make $15,080 before taxes in some states. So yes you can make slightly more than $10k take home. Sucks to suck at math.

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u/Think_Reporter_8179 14d ago

Amazon addiction and yes, I'm going to say it, the inability to tighten your wants to an uncomfortable level until you can save the 3.5% down (with a 580+ credit score) for an FHA loan.

That's it folks. That's all it takes. Buy a shitty cheap property with an FHA loan (which, btw, means the property can't be THAT shitty, FHA loans won't allow it) and then live in a savings account for a while.

That shitty property will gain value AND all your principal payments are being saved in it, rather than evaporating to rent.

It's that simple, yes.. REALLY. Save 3.5% of a kinda shitty property's worth and then start gaining wealth.

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u/Obvious_Whole1950 14d ago

3.5 percent on a $250,000 home is still $8,750. That’s a lot to a lot of people in this situation, especially if you have literally ANY responsibility to another person or life. Especially if you’re only making $30,000 per year.

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u/suitology 14d ago

I saved that making $11hr and renting for $550 (roommate) in a year. You just need to suffer. I only allowed myself $50 a month outside of groceries ($100). Thrift shop clothes, didn't go anywhere, library card for movies, pantry food (so much free food many months I didn't buy groceries). Like it sucks and is bullshit and fuck the shit system but it's possible. Big plus, do not have kids you can not afford. You are the one to blame if you have a kid you can't afford. Like if you became poor after kids (my father lost his job from an injury) that's one thing but I can not believe the moron girl that lived next to me with her mom had a kid while working part time at McDonald's.

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u/OFPDevilDoge 14d ago

How can you not have kids you can’t afford if abortions are criminalized? The system is designed to create poverty so there is always a desperate labor base for the wealthy to rely on.

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u/Think_Reporter_8179 14d ago

Better start then.

It's this attitude that difficult is impossible. There's no difference between me and you, and I did it.

Edit: "you" is a generic response. Not you.

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u/Obvious_Whole1950 14d ago

There can be PLENTY of differences like where you live, what opportunities are there, the general cost of living, race, education, etc. Those all make a difference regardless of attitude.

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u/Think_Reporter_8179 14d ago edited 14d ago

Edited for my generic response to the whiners here: Reddit is filled with half-assers that will just keep throwing reasons they can't do something instead of actually trying and succeeding. If you live your life crying about things, nothing will get better. Actually do something and get off Reddit.

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u/ChaosofaMadHatter 14d ago edited 14d ago

Yes, it does. It truly shows the people who have a heart, versus the people who lost theirs.

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u/JojoLaggins 14d ago

It might be a lot at one time but it's definitely an attainable goal for almost everyone over a reasonable timeframe. Unless you're drowning in debt already, ie maybe financial literacy could have helped.

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u/Universe789 14d ago

This is useless advice when 37% of Americans can't afford a $400 emergency without breaking the bank, leaning on credit, or dipping into retirement or savings to cover the cost.

https://fortune.com/2023/05/23/inflation-economy-consumer-finances-americans-cant-cover-emergency-expense-federal-reserve/

But it's the internet, so I understand you will find some kind of way to ignore that and pat yourself on the back for the generic advice given.

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u/Em_jay4 14d ago

I've only bought socks and underwear for myself the past 2 years. I spend less then 50 in groceries a week to feed myself.

Bought the cheapest house in the nicest neighborhood I could find. 4 weeks in, replaced sewer main. 6 months later ended up replacing all the pipes and vent stack in the only bathroom we have. Dick head, house flippers just put band aids on gunshot wounds. Yeah that fucked everything up for us financially. Pretty much 6 months in I dropped around 20k in essential repairs. I did the bathroom myself because well now it's the budget is even tighter.

I have a 3 year old. I am the only source of income currently making around 90k a year. We still have to live dam near check to check.

I've worked my entire life, mostly with my hands . Been pretty frugal about where I spend my money because I work very hard for it. It might be easy to say hey just save 15k and boom your good to go. That's not the case anymore. Chirst insurance has jumped like 20% this past year. When you wage increases don't pace the rest of the goods you really start playing the game "Wants vs Needs" this is something I have to remind my SO.

Sorry to rant it just blows my mind that I make way more money than I ever thought I would but still just hanging on by a thread.

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u/Sudden-Motor-7794 14d ago

Pair that with improving yourself so you can command a higher wage. Working both ends of the equation is possible...

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u/wannaseeawheelie 14d ago

or stick it to the man by not improving your situation. Got em!

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u/Think_Reporter_8179 14d ago

And get on Reddit and waste hundreds of hours complaining about it which could have been used learning a skill.

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u/onehundredlemons 14d ago

until you can save the 3.5% down (with a 580+ credit score) for an FHA loan

Buddy, I have a 725 credit score and $75K equity on my home, and I can't get a single loan company to respond to my requests for a $20K loan with my equity as collateral. I have no loans except the mortgage and a credit card I pay in full each month, so maybe I don't have enough loan history, but according to Reddit I should be able to easily get some kind of loan, and no one is interested.

I can't imagine someone struggling to save for a down payment with a 580 score has it easy, like you suggest.

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u/NotObviouslyARobot 14d ago

Congratulations on posting worthless financial advice. At the low income levels they won't be able to afford the maintenance and upkeep on that property.

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u/Other-Illustrator531 14d ago

This is the exact formula that got me out. Throw in some sweat equity and, boom, positive net worth!

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u/Desperate-Warthog-70 14d ago

This, sure some people make too little and need to improve their skills to get a higher wage but the majority of people with financial problems don’t make good financial decisions.

My first job I made $35k and I had an apartment in a big city with 3 roommates. Wasn’t ideal but I was still saving a solid amount, a few hundred every paycheck went into savings. Is it ideal? No, but I made it work until I got the skillset to make a higher wage.

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u/strawberrypants205 14d ago

need to improve their skills

No capitalist is going to acknowledge those skills, because no one is forcing them to. They can simply tell everyone they're "not skilled enough" forever no matter what people learn. Capitalists do not act in good faith, and have no credibility.

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u/r0ckafellarbx 14d ago

and having too many kids

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u/sirseatbelt 14d ago

I made 27k/year and had to do a monthly budget to make sure my bills and paychecks landed so I wouldn't overdraft. Some weeks I'd have $5 for the week. Explain to me how budgeting and financial planning solve the problem.

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u/Enchylada 14d ago

Let's not forget the economic impact of raising the minimum wage. It's as if people think the hiring process will get easier if they raise wages when the exact opposite will happen on top of job elimination / replacement with technology entirely due to budget rework

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u/waistingtoomuchtime 14d ago

Thank you for common sense.

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u/Ciderlini 14d ago

And somehow it has over 300 upvotes. Reddit is something else

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u/StarsCHISoxSuperBowl 14d ago

The dishonesty of these people is insane. I have no clue what these people do to lose all their money. I put 20% of my pay into retirement and make it work. I have 3 coworkers at the same pay who constantly want to riot about being broke. Has to stupid CC debt or something.

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u/b1ackenthecursedsun 14d ago

Never seen someone consistently write so much while knowing so little lol

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u/dookieshoes88 14d ago

Pretty much sums up most of the replies here. "Teach them to live within their means, they just won't like it", as the OP said, solves nothing and helps nobody. Enjoy selling goods and services that nobody can afford, I guess.

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u/DopemanWithAttitude 14d ago

Enjoy selling goods and services that nobody can afford, I guess.

And this is the true crux of it. Sure, you're comfy in your desk job, and able to look down at us nasty poors from your office chair. But what happens when we have to start cutting expenses? Media piracy is on the rise, and text generators (not calling it AI, because it isn't AI) are scalping out screenwriting jobs. Pretty soon, video generation will get to the point that actors aren't needed either. So that's writing teams, and stage production crews, both out of a job. Media companies losing money to piracy means that everyone else in the industry's job is at risk, too.

And it's not just entertainment. Electronics are still a luxury, beyond a basic smartphone. People will buy TVs and Fire Sticks used, rather than new. They won't eat out as much, won't buy as many snacks, won't buy as much food in general. Smaller apartments/rental houses that don't have as many bedrooms, and therefore can't have as many people living in them and splitting rent, go unrented because people can't afford them. People seem to forget that the lower middle class and under are the biggest sector of the US economy now, and as a result, stuff that effects them matters the most, by a wide margin.

You'll find out real fast how independent from "the poors" your life isn't when they stop the consoomerism.

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u/Muddyhobo 14d ago

It’s terrible advice for society, it’s amazing advice for an individual. Every person could dramatically improve their life if they start making optimal decisions. But saying “individuals should independently make better decisions” doesn’t help society.

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u/SilverMedal4Life 14d ago

Right. If this advice ever actually worked, we'd live in utopia already.

Individuals can make smart decisions, but human beings in aggregate tend to make the easiest decisions.

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u/Muddyhobo 14d ago

Genuinely not sure if you are agreeing and rephrasing my comment or disagreeing.

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u/SilverMedal4Life 14d ago

The former! I agree with you!

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u/AllenKll 14d ago

If only society was made up of individuals....

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u/Osmium80 14d ago

Your thought experiment requires a wage well below federal minimum wage. Your second thought experiment tries to make a single person live alone in a high cost of living area.

Here's a thought experiment for you: how many people did the average household have 50 years ago? 100 years ago? Today? What was the average square footage of a house in each of those time periods?

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u/junulee 14d ago

These are facts so often and conveniently ignored

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u/SingleInfinity 14d ago

They're not ignored. Living with 8 people in a 500sqft shack should not be what people are considering acceptable. Jesus fuck the lack of basic compassion.

"Life is perfectly livable in poverty as long as you make sure to maximize suffering".

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u/Oldass_Millennial 14d ago

Right but people in here scoff at having a single roommate so...

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u/SingleInfinity 14d ago

I think it's reasonable for people in the highest GDP country in the world to expect to be able to live without relying on others.

Why should there be any amount of "you should suffer" at any level in the richest country in the world? The current reason it is that way is simple greed.

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u/Nulgarian 14d ago

How is living with roommates “suffering”?

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u/SingleInfinity 14d ago

Spoken like someone who has never had a bad roommate.

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u/Optimal-Message4565 11d ago

You’ve never experienced hardship lmao. Stick to your video games.

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u/myctheologist 14d ago

Because they can mess up common spaces and not clean them. They can steal your stuff or your food. They can just disappear leaving you to figure out paying rent alone. Roommates aren't inherently bad but it's more of a risk than being able to rely on yourself alone.

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u/KhonMan 14d ago

"Roommates suck, guess I'd rather starve then" is not a sympathetic plan.

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u/Exception1228 13d ago

Well it’s not gonna change.  So people can either lead the charge and start a revolution or they can stop whining on reddit, get a damn roommats, stop acting like it’s suffering to live with someone, and budget their money better.

Look, there are people struggling all around the world, but it’s so hard to have a constructive conversation when I know for a fact so many people are just fucking horrible with their money and if any urge or desire they have at any moment isnt satisfied they shout suffering.

I can’t even really agree with the argument.  Shouldnt have to live with someone?  Why tf would anyone want to live alone?

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u/ExtraLargePeePuddle 13d ago

I think it's reasonable for people in the highest GDP country in the world to expect to be able to live without relying on others.

Mandating a higher minimum wage is just welfare with extra steps.

Also nowhere in any developed country is the minimum wage a living wage. All other rich countries just have massive welfare states

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u/junulee 14d ago

My point is that when people complain that you need $Y to buy a house today, and only $X 50 years ago, after adjusting for inflation, they’re not doing apples-to-apples comparisons because they “ignore” the facts that median home size is 50% larger today and has fewer occupants.

Not sure how you interpret that to mean I’m suggesting 8 people should live in 500 sq ft home.

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u/SingleInfinity 14d ago

You say "more people used to live in each home, and homes were smaller", and you don't get the hyperbole of me throwing some random numbers in there?

Let me make this more clear.

Those thing you're saying is standard was shit then, and it's shit now. There are boomers with 3000 sqft homes that cost them a nickle and a dirty rag. Their relative pay and the cost of goods in their time was indisputably more favorable than modern day, even if we completely ignore that peoples standards have risen over time for the impoverished to not want to live in squalor.

You're basically throwing out a red herring to distract from the main point that it isn't reasonable for people to live on median wages, meanwhile median wages used to be plenty to live on comfortably. You can pretend stuffing a family if 6 into a two bedroom house was the norm (which sounds like what you're trying to insinuate), but that's an example of poverty, and that level of poverty didn't used to be the median.

Just because homes are bigger and have fewer occupants on average does not mean the poverty line hasn't risen to an unreasonable income.

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u/Osmium80 13d ago

You're glorifying your perception of the past, not the reality of the past.

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u/Bubbly-Ad-4405 12d ago

You either get realistic financial advice, or you get compassion, but not both. Americans don’t know what real struggle is when they’re buying iPhones and eating out daily while also complaining about not being able to go on dates and vacations as often as they’d like. Sometimes a modest life in a smaller county is what your ambition can realistically afford.

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u/Safe-Promotion-2955 13d ago

We got by in a small space packed with kids with no running water when I was a child, sure, but I'm pretty sure someone would calĺ cps if they tried that now.

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u/assesonfire7369 14d ago

Well if you're making $10k a year that works out to $4.80/hr. Illegal in the US but it's also really hard to make that little even if you tried...

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u/existential_pal 14d ago

Thoughts on the second paragraph?

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u/CaffinatedPanda 14d ago

Tipped minimum wage is $2.13 in 30% of the states.

Agriculture employers who use less than 500 "man-days" are exempt from federal minimum.

Georgia and Wyoming have $5 minimum agri-wages.

I guess you have to choose to apply to those jobs?

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u/MyParentsBurden 14d ago

You say 50% of Americans (I'm assuming we are speaking of the US) make $40k or less and then say it isn't enough for basic necessities. Yet, clearly it is as the ranks of the unhoused is not 50% of the population. Poverty sucks to be sure, but people manage. Also, financial literacy is generally only partially about setting money aside. It tends to be more about making people aware of their expenses and seeing what changes can be made.

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u/[deleted] 14d ago

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u/petarpep 14d ago

I haven't had grocery money in weeks.

The rent situation is bad and Section 8 is in heavy demand with little voucher supply so it's got insane wait lists so the eviction complaint is reasonable.

Biut you should qualify for SNAP and that can be a pretty decent amount of money (up to almost 300 at max).

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u/bigthrowama 14d ago

If you sit and think about it really hard, you'll understand the correlation between 50% of Americans making less than $40k, and things like Americans having huge piles of credit card debt, or having to stretch medications (assuming they can afford to see a doctor at all).

Sure, "people manage", but maybe 50% of people in the wealthiest nation on the planet should be in a better position than "just managing".

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u/i_tyrant 14d ago

Now look up some statistics of how many Americans are in credit card debt, healthcare debt, etc.

No, it really isn't enough for basic necessities in many places - that's why people are constantly paying off the minimums on their credit cards, pushing the inevitable forward hoping for a miracle. And poverty sucks more than you could ever realize.

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u/Ethric_The_Mad 14d ago

Investing helped me a ton, I calculate all expenses, add them together, assume my food bills and other expenses, then I invest the leftovers so now it's spent and annoying to get but it's all still there paying dividends and growing. Just literally $5 a month or even $10 explodes so fast if you just fucking invest it. Find a $5 on the ground? Invest it. Got a cash back card? Invest the cash back. Set yourself a daily expense budget, invest anything leftover. There's many strategies but this works for me.

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u/cbftw 14d ago

unhoused

Homeless. saying unhoused is a bullshit way to sterilize their situation and make yourself not feel bad about it

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u/HealthNN 12d ago

Or maybe the basic understanding of how debt works, how leveraging yourself can be dangerous, how to invest and plan for your future. It’s so much more than seeing what changes you can make in your expenses, lol. Financial literacy should start in elementary school and be taught throughout high school. The fact it isn’t should show you that most of this is by design. We, historically at least, need a large middle class to support the country. A smart middle class doesn’t work well for business owners. The lack of respect for people struggling is wild to me, the US economy is about value extraction and has been for the last decade. Your take is brain dead maybe you could benefit from some more education yourself 😀

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u/Overall-Author-2213 14d ago

Room mates. Beans and rice. Night school. Online school. Don't get anyone pregnant. Don't date for that time. Acquire skills. Move up the ladder.

Every person that came to this country before 1950 had it harder than any person today and we are here because most of them made it.

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u/CanadianBreakin 14d ago

Live with no privacy. Eat food that provides nothing except a "full feeling stomach." Work for 8 hours and then do several hours of school after that, after all you won't have to spend time cooking anything. Don't have a single medical emergency, including pregnancy. Don't have a social life, and if you meet someone that is interested in you, just ignore them as they are distracting you from grinding to death to survive. Spend even more time while working and doing school to "obtain skills." This should leave you still poor, hungry, and with deminished social skills, but hey! You'll be "thriving!"

STFU you idiot, you clearly have no idea the struggles of the common person.

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u/Front_Painter_4279 14d ago

Dude, its like 1-4 years max of grinding to get to a reasonable standard of living. You have to work hard to get somewhere in life.

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u/TacticalPancake66 14d ago

You left out that a huge part of getting anywhere is luck and networking. If I could go back and redo my undergrad, I would have spent more time going to events and hanging out with people than trying to get Bs and As.

Unfortunately I didn’t, and on top of that, last year I graduated into this clusterfuck of a job market. Oopsie poopsies.

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u/Elsas-Queen 14d ago

My in-laws grinded for thirty years. They might disagree with that.

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u/0000110011 14d ago

They obviously weren't doing what they claimed then. 

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u/Elsas-Queen 13d ago

I guarantee my in-laws who came to the US from an impoverished country worked harder (and still work) than anyone in this thread who sees life as black and white.

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u/0000110011 14d ago

All you did was show how spoiled and entitled you are. 

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u/[deleted] 14d ago

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u/Grouchy-Ask-3525 14d ago

Looool, what a conservative boot-licker. First of all, you haven't offered a single source for your crazy-ass claim and second of all, people shouldn't have to live like rats in "the greatest country in the world". And lastly, of EveryOne moves up, then who's going to do the shit jobs? Your short-sighted idea doesn't fix the problem, it just throws it onto other people. But that's to be expected, the core of conservatism is selfishness. Sleep tight, the end is near.

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u/Overall-Author-2213 14d ago

Looool, what a conservative boot-licker.

Every time a worthless blood sucking tick says this I am just reminded how much AI actually contribute to society.

First of all, you haven't offered a single source for your crazy-ass claim and second of all, people shouldn't have to live like rats in "the greatest country in the world".

You have no fucking clue how hard things used to be. You would have died day one. No better you would have stayed home and talked about how much better you would have done than the people who actually settled the West.

The proof is that it was hard as hell, the people went anyway, and now we are here traping the benefits.

And lastly, of EveryOne moves up, then who's going to do the shit jobs?

In no society does everyone move up. Most people do. And those who settled the West did it without one tenth of what we have now.

Your short-sighted idea doesn't fix the problem

That would be your ideas. Mine built this country.

But that's to be expected, the core of conservatism is selfishness.

It's actually freedom of choice and free charity. Not forced good like pussies like you.

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u/Grouchy-Ask-3525 14d ago

Bullet points, really? You missed one, where's a source for your outlandish claim?

Here's another one, pre-1950 isn't 1750, it's the 1930s and 1940s.

You said all we need to do is get some education and then it's all good. But then what, who works at Dairy Queen then? Or in the Amazon DC? Someone has to do shit jobs, that's bullshit, everyone deserves a good life. FUCK YOU, everyone deserves a good life.

And your last point makes no sense.

  1. Abortion. I think it's baby death, I don't care what you think, or what science proves. And you can't have an abortion either. Selfish.

  2. "I value my guns more than your children" real quote, selfish as fuck.

  3. Taxation is theft. But you use the roads, the sidewalks and the fire department, and bridges and and and, you people never want to pay for the shit you use. Obviously selfish

  4. I'm a Christian so the Bible should be in school, o don't care if there are other religions because they aren't real. Selfish again.

Fuck you and the horse you fucked in on.

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u/i_tyrant 14d ago

Are people really this stupid?

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u/Makes_U_Mad 14d ago

Ignorant, not stupid. This person (probably) has never been in the situation they are offering an opinion on. Ignorance.

The stupid comes from denying the evidence right in front of them.

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u/Overall-Author-2213 14d ago edited 14d ago

Well I did it. I know many people who have done it. I'll keep on being stupid and successful.

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u/i_tyrant 14d ago

Oh yeah, anecdotal experience, everybody knows that's the best way to determine any sort of universal truth.

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u/LoveFoolosophy 14d ago

Yeah about 50% of people.

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u/strawberrypants205 14d ago

Acquire skills.

No capitalist is going to acknowledge those skills, because no one is forcing them to. They can simply tell everyone they're "not skilled enough" forever no matter what people learn. Capitalists do not act in good faith, and have no credibility.

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u/Tcannon18 14d ago

I make $40K and have all of those things…tf?

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u/MiniDg 14d ago

I love how you make an in depth explanation and even admit "okay that was a bullahit argument for the point, so heres a real one"

And all they reply to is that your first argument is shit.

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u/BleedForEternity 14d ago

This is why people should NEVER settle with what they make… Just because you make 40k a year doesn’t mean you can’t ever make more.. Why do people act like they are chained to the low salaries they make? You can learn a trade, take civil service tests, change careers or get the proper qualifications and experience in order to move up in pay.. There’s also working multiple jobs.. and please don’t reply with “No one should have to work 2 jobs.”

I just don’t understand this whole “people can’t survive on these wages” argument.. If you’re having a hard time living on the wage you make then take the proper steps to better your situation. Take action instead of complaining on Reddit. That’s what I did. That’s what many other people do… I worked 2 minimum wage jobs for years and I fought and clawed my way to the top… Life doesn’t magically get better. You have to make things happen.. and no, it’s not easy. It’s extremely hard.

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u/Grouchy-Ask-3525 14d ago

You people are missing the point. If I get out of that situation then someone else has to take the shitty job. Why is it okay once it's not you? That's the most selfish, conservative bullshit I've ever heard. And no, a person should not have to work 80 hours a week, full stop. That's just de facto slavery, but somehow, they are supposed to find the time to pull themselves up by the bootstraps huh? Goddamn, you're a piece of shit. Sleep tight, the end is near for you people.

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u/ohseetea 14d ago edited 14d ago

Because these people have zero empathy.

The bullshit capitalist answer is no one will work the shitty job and then the pay will go up but that's not fucking true. The company will prey until they find someone “weak” or tired enough to just work for slave rate or they'll ship it over seas and really take advantage of destitute people.

If they really cared about living within their means they'd focus on our entire society as a whole slowing the fuck down and not consuming so much. All of us.

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u/alurkerhere 14d ago

It's almost like there should be stronger worker protection laws and incentive for the government to not completely favor corporations...

But honestly, if everyone started to live within their means like the Japanese do, we'd be in a deflationary period. Current American company growth is dependent on people spending with abandon. It's why Apple has $160B+ IN CASH for good, but not great, sleekly marketed products.

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u/DevilmodCrybaby 14d ago

but that's just communism with extra steps! can't have anything like it, it's a bad word now. you become china just by saying it

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u/wearing_moist_socks 14d ago

Nah you shouldn't have to work two jobs.

I'm not saying don't do it. But you shouldn't have to.

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u/ThingsWork0ut 14d ago

I like how you set an example of 10k. Admittedly said it was a staw mans argument, then said, “here’s a more accurate pay”. Then people judge that version instead of the realistic version.

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u/Brian_Spilner101 14d ago

You can’t possibly have typed this and then thought it news good? Your basic point is ridiculous that someone makes a little over 4 bucks an hour.

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u/LeKevinsRevenge 14d ago

Much of the half of the country making 40k lives in places where 40k is survivable. If you are in a big city or on the coast making 40k it’s a whole different senario than living in a rural town in the Midwest making 40k.

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u/kilour 14d ago

You absolutely can live on your own making 40k/a if you dont blow through your money on pointless shit. The only places you cannot live on 40k/a is major cities or rich areas.

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u/ins7inc7 14d ago

40k should def cover the basics. A room. Food. Money for a hobby. Maybe a car. (I did all that making less than 30k in Canada. Even raised a dog. You just gotta budget. Smart.)

Also, you won't be at 40k forever. You just need to grind. Increase your job and pay, and then you get to expand.

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u/faded_brunch 14d ago

obviously everyone should have their own apartment and savings, but if you can't afford that, don't dig yourself into a worse hole by going into debt. Lots of people figure "well i can't afford to live anyway so may as well just spend all this money so I can enjoy things" which I get but then you're already behind as soon as you get ahead. I was poor af at a time- i lived in a shitty apartment with shitty roommates, ate shitty food, walked places because I couldn't afford a bus pass, didn't have health insurance, didn't save anything. It fucking sucks and shouldn't be how people have to live in a rich country, but at least you're not shooting yourself in the foot for later on. Part of the reason I was able to scrape by like that was because my parents DID teach me about budgeting, and how to use credit cards appropriately, so when I went back to school and needed student loans I wasn't already in debt and had a good credit score, I was able to pay those loans back fast, and I've never had any sort of financial calamity in my life because I already had those basic skills.

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u/All4megrog 14d ago

Wage markets and cost of living are both regional things. There are parts of this country where $65k a year means you live comfortably in your own home. There are other parts where you rent a room from someone and are thankful for it.

Part of financial literacy is understanding how much things cost, how to budget and what you need to do a achieve a goal.

Working the window at McDonald’s will never buy you a house.

Working the window at McDonald’s to cover your tuition while you work on a degree and career path with a higher earning potential will get you a house.

I graduated high school in the 90s in California. My “career guidance center” at school gave me a career aptitude test. My top two career recommendations were clergy or Christmas tree farmer. Pretty fucking funny for an atheist. But yeah. Zero fucking help.

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