by ian807 » Tue 26 Oct 2010, 18:21:18
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Outcast_Searcher', '
')I wonder how many years folks have to see this stuff going on before they wake up to reality and live far enough below their means to do some SERIOUS saving.
You're under the impression that there were always jobs out there with salaries that allowed saving. I'm 52, now earning a comfortable 6 figure salary. Up until 14 years ago, my top salary was $27K a year. There were no savings, especially if you had to have a car to get to work. The car ate up any extra you had, and oh, don't get sick or have dental problems. Very expensive.
Up until three years ago, I saw kids out of college getting $60K or more to start, with bonuses. In the financial arena, these salaries were *much* higher. This was relatively rate until the late 90s. You worked your way up, which meant less to save. That's a major reason some older people are in such bad shape. Salaries prior to the start of the dot.com boom were simply less. It was worse if you were in manufacturing. You watched your salary
decrease after the 1970s as outsourcing, like a running sore, drained the wealth out of the American middle class.
I used to listen to these snake oil economic morons on late night talk shows (e.g. Tony Robbins) who wanted to sell their course tapes to suckers, tell me how I should have at least a year's salary in the bank. Hell, most of the people I knew then would have been lucky to have a
month's salary in the bank. They weren't extravagant. They just had kids, and a car, and got sick occasionally. Their 40- to 60K salaries with both parents working, just wasn't enough to cover that and save anything. Wages haven't kept up with prices since the 70s. Who did they think they were kidding?
And through all of this, people have been subjected to media that told them they were losers if they didn't have the car, the house, the [fill in the blank]. Most people, frankly are stupid. They
believed what the media was telling them. In a predatory sales environment, people succumbed.
I wouldn't judge too much until you're in your 60s, and have had kids, and gotten sick, and car trouble, and dental bills or emergency plumbing problems on the house, sometimes all in the same month. Things may look a bit different then.