• roz@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    Find your state here

    expand

    Alabama

    Low end of middle class: $41,471  High end of middle class: $124,424  Median household income: $62,212

    Alaska

    Low end of middle class: $57,748  High end of middle class: $173,262  Median household income: $86,631

    Arizona

    Low end of middle class: $51,538  High end of middle class: $154,630  Median household income: $77,315

    Arkansas

    Low end of middle class: $39,129  High end of middle class: $117,400  Median household income: $58,700

    California

    Low end of middle class: $63,674  High end of middle class: $191,042  Median household income: $95,521

    Colorado

    Low end of middle class: $61,934  High end of middle class: $185,822  Median household income: $92,911

    Connecticut

    Low end of middle class: $61,104 High end of middle class: $183,330  Median household income: $91,665

    Delaware

    Low end of middle class: $54,235  High end of middle class: $162,722  Median household income: $81,361

    Florida

    Low end of middle class: $48,869  High end of middle class: $146,622  Median household income: $73,311

    Georgia

    Low end of middle class: $49,750  High end of middle class: $149,264  Median household income: $74,632

    Hawaii

    Low end of middle class: $63,542  High end of middle class: $190,644  Median household income: $95,322

    Idaho

    Low end of middle class: $49,956  High end of middle class: $149,884  Median household income: $74,942

    Illinois

    Low end of middle class: $53,532  High end of middle class: $160,612  Median household income: $80,306

    Indiana

    Low end of middle class: $46,313  High end of middle class: $138,954  Median household income: $69,477

    Iowa

    Low end of middle class: $47,617  High end of middle class: $142,866  Median household income: $71,433

    Kansas

    Low end of middle class: $46,884 High end of middle class: $140,666 Median household income: $70,333

    Kentucky

    Low end of middle class: $40,741 High end of middle class: $122,236 Median household income: $61,118

    Louisiana

    Low end of middle class: $38,815 High end of middle class: $116,458 Median household income: $58,229

    Maine

    Low end of middle class: $49,150 High end of middle class: $147,466 Median household income: $73,733

    Maryland

    Low end of middle class: $65,779 High end of middle class: $197,356 Median household income: $98,678

    Massachusetts

    Low end of middle class: $66,565 High end of middle class: $199,716  Median household income: $99,858

    Michigan

    Low end of middle class: $46,117 High end of middle class: $138,366 Median household income: $69,183

    Minnesota

    Low end of middle class: $56,718 High end of middle class: $170,172 Median household income: $85,086

    Mississippi

    Low end of middle class: $36,132 High end of middle class: $108,406 Median household income: $54,203

    Missouri

    Low end of middle class: $45,692 High end of middle class: $137,090 Median household income: $68,545

    Montana

    Low end of middle class: $47,198 High end of middle class: $141,608 Median household income: $70,804

    Nebraska

    Low end of middle class: $49,722 High end of middle class: $149,180  Median household income: $74,590

    Nevada

    Low end of middle class: $50,904 High end of middle class: $152,728  Median household income: $76,364

    New Hampshire

    Low end of middle class: $64,552 High end of middle class: $193,676  Median household income: $96,838

    New Jersey

    Low end of middle class: $66,514 High end of middle class: $199,562 Median household income: $99,781

    New Mexico

    Low end of middle class: $41,508 High end of middle class: $124,536 Median household income: $62,268

    New York

    Low end of middle class: $54,725 High end of middle class: $164,190  Median household income: $82,095

    North Carolina

    Low end of middle class: $47,198 High end of middle class: $141,608 Median household income: $70,804

    North Dakota

    Low end of middle class: $51,012 High end of middle class: $153,050  Median household income: $76,525

    Ohio

    Low end of middle class: $45,175 High end of middle class: $135,538 Median household income: $67,769

    Oklahoma

    Low end of middle class: $41,421 High end of middle class: $124,276 Median household income: $62,138

    Oregon

    Low end of middle class: $53,435 High end of middle class: $160,320 Median household income: $80,160

    Pennsylvania

    Low end of middle class: $49,211 High end of middle class: $147,648 Median household income: $73,824

    Rhode Island

    Low end of middle class: $56,642 High end of middle class: $169,944 Median household income: $84,972

    South Carolina

    Low end of middle class: $45,198 High end of middle class: $135,608 Median household income: $67,804

    South Dakota

    Low end of middle class: $47,869 High end of middle class: $143,620 Median household income: $71,810

    Tennessee

    Low end of middle class: $45,083 High end of middle class: $135,262 Median household income: $67,631

    Texas

    Low end of middle class: $50,515 High end of middle class: $151,560 Median household income: $75,780

    Utah

    Low end of middle class: $62,274 High end of middle class: $186,842 Median household income: $93,421

    Vermont

    Low end of middle class: $54,135 High end of middle class: $162,422 Median household income: $81,211

    Virginia

    Low end of middle class: $59,948 High end of middle class: $179,862 Median household income: $89,931

    Washington

    Low end of middle class: $63,064 High end of middle class: $189,210 Median household income: $94,605

    West Virginia

    Low end of middle class: $37,295 High end of middle class: $111,896 Median household income: $55,948

    Wisconsin

    Low end of middle class: $49,749 High end of middle class: $149,262 Median household income: $74,631

    Wyoming

    Low end of middle class: $48,272 High end of middle class: $144,830 Median household income: $72,415

  • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    Before Reagan became President, ‘middle class’ was still defined as one job being able to support a family of four. By the time Bush Sr. left office, ‘middle class’ was two incomes to keep the house going. At the same time, $1 million went from being a vast personal fortune to what a rich guy paid for a party.

  • enkers@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    The report, which crunched the numbers for all 50 states, is based on Pew Research’s definition of middle class: two-thirds to double the median household income.

    This kinda strikes me as a bit of a disingenuous definition. Being middle class always struck me as having a moderate amount of disposable income after all regular life expenses.

    If you’re living in an expensive part of your state, you could well be above that 66% of median state income mark, but still be quite impoverished.

    • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      PA is a good example of this. The “high middle class” income is about $150k. That’s great if you live in Dubois but not so great in Philly.

    • davidgro@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I agree, but I think I can guess why they do that - they can maybe get total income from aggregate tax records, but disposable income would have to be asked individually.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Being middle class always struck me as having a moderate amount of disposable income after all regular life expenses.

      I’ve been getting shit since “Bad and Bougie” became a thing that the bougerouise were “middle class” in pre-revolutionary France.

      Because “middle class” isn’t a mathematical range, class are not defined that equally.

      In modern America we have:

      1. Oligarchies

      2. People who don’t have to worry about money.

      3. Homeowners living paycheck to paycheck

      4. Renters living paycheck to paycheck.

      Really you could combine 3 and 4, but home ownership is one of the last big investments people have. When “American middle class” became iconic, homeownership was just taken for granted.

      It’s a vague outdated system to expect there’s only 3 classes in the American economy

  • Opinionhaver@feddit.uk
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    2 days ago

    That’s wild. If I was making 100k a year I’d be able to retire in a decade. I make about a third of that and I’ve got virtually everything a man could ask for.

      • Opinionhaver@feddit.uk
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        2 days ago

        I live in a tiny 75-year-old granny cottage, drive a 17-year-old truck, wear 10-year-old clothes, never eat out, and never travel anywhere.

          • Opinionhaver@feddit.uk
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            2 days ago

            Turning off that feature sure was among the better choices when it comes to my social media use and mental well-being. Knowing Lemmy, it’s probably my choice of transportation.

            • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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              2 days ago

              Are you living alone? That’s the only way I can make those numbers add up. I’ve got a similar lifestyle but repairs/food/dependants mean I need a significantly higher income to break even AND save for retirement.

              • Opinionhaver@feddit.uk
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                2 days ago

                I’d be living even cheaper than this if I was living alone. My average monthly expenses for the past 3 years have been 2989.22€ including retirement investments.

            • getoffthedrugsdude@lemmy.ml
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              2 days ago

              Really? I would have guessed jealousy, like a petty “tHeY hAvE iT EaSy” or something else small-minded. Either way, kudos!

    • bss03@infosec.pub
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      1 day ago

      I made 100k / yr for a decade. I was not able to retire. Tho, I am in a better position than many of my peers.

      I no longer make 100k / yr, but I’m still above median for my state, and with this job I can also help provide care for a disabled family member in their home.

    • dhork@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I see your UK instance, is your “1/3 of that” in dollars or GBP? For context, 100k USD is currently about 77k GBP

      • Opinionhaver@feddit.uk
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        2 days ago

        I live in northern europe. Converted to dollars my current yearly income is a little over 33k USD.

        • dhork@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Yeah, but you get all that free Socialized healthcare that we 'Muricans have to pay for

  • dryfter@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    I knew what I was going to find when I looked for my state and find out I’m even poorer than I thought I was 😣

    • wjs018@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      It’s all based on the median household income. I feel like that isn’t the best representation if the median household is losing purchasing power over time due to wage stagnation, but it’s the definition they went with. From the article:

      The report, which crunched the numbers for all 50 states, is based on Pew Research’s definition of middle class: two-thirds to double the median household income.

      • solrize@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Yeah I see now. I think I can calculate a meaningful upper bound using the GINI index. I’ll see if I can work out numbers that look plausible, and make another post sometime.