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re: Is one major cause of wealth disparity a poor rate of return on social security?

Posted on 5/29/14 at 11:53 am to
Posted by ironsides
Nashville, TN
Member since May 2006
8153 posts
Posted on 5/29/14 at 11:53 am to
I guess it depends on your age. I graduated college in 97, somehow found a way to sock away $10k a year off of a $40k salary and NY taxes. I feel sorry for today's college graduate. I probably graduated at the right time though.

I compare this with my parents who graduated in in the early '60's and they found a way to save a lot of dough, as did my siblings that graduated in the late '80's.

Lucky if they can find a job, and even if they can, don't see how it's possible to save jack shite.

I feel like discretionary income + Savings as a % of total income is less now certainly than it was at the end of the 80's but that's my frame of reference.
Posted by Taxing Authority
Houston
Member since Feb 2010
57428 posts
Posted on 5/29/14 at 12:05 pm to
quote:

I feel like discretionary income + Savings as a % of total income is less now certainly than it was at the end of the 80's but that's my frame of reference.
I certainly understand the perception! I suppose it depends on how we define "discretionary". This will make me sound like an old fogey, but... if a 1600sf house was good enough for a family in 1970, it should be good enough today. So... I'd consider the cost difference between a 1600sf house and a 2400sf house part of discretionary spending.

But... if you ask the average homeowner if 50% of their mortgage is "discretionary" they'd likely say no. They consider their home a "necessity".

Given that housing is such a large portion of one's income... think how much "wealthier", how much more discretionary income those people would have, and how much more they could save by reducing their home mortgage by 50%.
This post was edited on 5/29/14 at 12:07 pm
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