by WildRose » Mon 02 Oct 2006, 19:13:33
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ClubOfRomeII', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Polemic', 'P')rices and corporate profits are up as wages stagnate and Americans are forced ever deeper into debt.
Good article. I have an objection to the idea that anyone is "forced" into debt though. If you don't want to borrow....don't. If you are living beyond your means...stop. If you are unhappy with your paycheck from macdonalds, go LEARN something of value, the knowing of which someone will pay you more than macdonalds does. I don't know about anyone else, but my time digging ditches and cleaning toilets in college taught me more about why I wanted to not be at the bottom of the economic foodchain better than anything else in my life.
Sounds like personal responsibility for ones actions is being discounted as to WHY people are in debt. I realize keeping up with the Jones's is important, but we aren't FORCED to do so, we are ignorant and silly and run out and just DO it. Shame on us, but lets not try and pretend that peer pressure and what society wants to advertise us into doing is a substitute for clear thinking about what we can, and can not, afford.
Anyway, I can agree that as Americans standards of living are forced downward, what we see happening in relation to debt is hardly a surprise.
I certainly agree with a lot of your post. Some people take on too much debt. Some could use further education to increase their earning power. It is very tempting to live beyond one's means, and many of us have had to learn a lesson or two in this regard.
However, I believe a lot of people are teetering on the high cost of living. My family could be a case study. My husband has a well-paying job and mine's not bad, and we have a moderate amount of debt. We're raising three kids. We don't keep up with the Joneses - we're not even in the running! But the value of our income is steadily declining with rising costs of basic needs. We're living quite modestly and don't have any expensive habits.
Honestly, I hear the same lament from most of the people I know, who are, on average, lower middle class to middle class people.