About one in three Americans making six-figure salaries are worried about paying their bills, according to a new survey from the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
Yeah, but like, isn't that where the majority of people live?
So when talking about "most places" it makes sense for it to be "places most likely for people to live". If it was literally "most places" America is pretty fucking empty.
I googled it, the average price for an acre in Kansas is like 3.5k.
In "most places" it's cheap as hell. But no one lives there so why talk about it?
I'm in the income bracket described here (certainly not "wealthy") and while I wouldn't say i am struggling, I have had to cut down on some extraneous spending. Nothing like what most people are facing though.
As others pointed out, there are an awful lot of people who live in places where $100-150k is not close to wealthy. A small number of large, expensive cities has a giant percentage of the population.
How is anyone surprised that when inflation stays up for a while, people find it hard to maintain their standard of living. When you compare the person making $150k to the person making $100k, it doesn't mean that they're pocketing $50k every year, it means that they're likely renting a more expensive place or paying on a more expensive car. They're likely both just living within their means and, of you make everything in life cost more, both are going to have a hard time paying their bills. It's not until you get to people who are making more than they can spend that that changes.
The parts of the state(s) where nobody lives are driving down the number. For Missouri that number is accurate if you live 3 hours from any city with more than one zip code.
A frustratingly empty article. Why are they struggling to "make ends meet"? What ends? If it's housing, this is a housing story. If it's high auto loan debt, that's a mother matter. If it's not housing and it's accrued consumer debt, that's a different matter.
They never say, so there isn't much to conclude from this piece.
Yeah people tend to spend what they make. Larger incomes are spent on bigger houses and nicer cars. But larger incomes have more wiggle room to cut back and afford the basics if they have to.