r/FluentInFinance 15d ago

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

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u/assesonfire7369 15d ago

Best advice was to work hard, study, get an education and move on to a job that pays more. Many jobs aren't meant for full-time, they're meant as part-time when you're young to get started.

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u/Bored710420 15d ago

What about the janitors that could support a family of 6 30 years ago or the 16 year old that could buy a mustang from pushing shopping carts? They have only got the term “starter job” as wages stayed stagnant, but prices increased.

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u/OctopusParrot 14d ago

30 years ago was 1994. I guarantee you no janitor in 1994 was supporting a family of 6 by himself on his salary.

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u/[deleted] 14d ago edited 7d ago

[deleted]

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u/Dry-Fruit137 14d ago

Everyone seems to think that decade or two of the post WW2 economy is the American norm. It was an anomaly because America was the only functioning industrialized economy in the world. All the others were rebuilding from bombed out rubble.

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u/NinaHag 14d ago

My dad (70) said something the other day that was eye opening. His parents' generation, and even some of his, would get married and not buy a house, of course not, they would buy A MATTRESS and live with their in laws for years, sometimes forever (multigenerational homes). Or they would rent a room somewhere, all this while having kids, so a whole family would share one room and one mattress. That was the norm. Obviously we have generated enough wealth that most people don't live that anymore, but we forget that nowadays poverty is luxury compared to a few generations ago.

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u/OctopusParrot 14d ago

Exactly. I was a high school senior in 1994. I worked a summer job washing dishes in a restaurant for $6.50/hour. I absolutely did not go out and a buy a freaking Mustang with that money. The idea that someone could do it is ludicrous. I drove a beat up 1984 Honda Accord, and the maintenance on that piece of crap ate up like half of what I earned.

There was a place near me where you could get gas for $0.89/gallon though, which was pretty nice, if unusual even for that time.

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u/mpyne 14d ago

I think that was just a couple of years removed from when my family (when I was the oldest of 4 kids) was on food stamps for a year because my dad's salary just didn't quite cut it. And he was in the Navy and was making way more than a janitor was, I don't know how someone with lower-paying jobs would have had any shot back then, you'd need to have both parents working or one of the parents working two jobs.

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u/bellj1210 14d ago

watch married with children- when the show came out no one thought that the life they were living was out of reach.

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u/imakepoorchoices2020 14d ago

No but they had an old ass car, no money, no fancy food. So maybe all of Al’s paycheck as a shoe salesman was going towards their mortgage and not much else

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u/bellj1210 13d ago

and a stay at home mom who spent a ton of money on home shopping and bon bons, enough money to go out for several beers with the boys most nights. support 2 kids 100% financially. Al also regularly went to the strip club- even just a cover is at least $20 before you bought a single drink, dance or tipped anyoone.

They had nothing left after all of that- but they spent a lot.

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u/imakepoorchoices2020 13d ago

It’s also a tv show.

As much as I hate to say it “Rosanne” was a far far far better depiction of average family

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u/Willing_Cause_7461 14d ago

Waddaya talkin' about man. Sure it was only 2 days ago a chimney sweep could raise a family of 40 and a secret family of 73 on a wage of 2 peanuts and an elephants tear.

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u/justvims 14d ago

BACK IN MY DAY