Your first para is so sad and depressing. I'd put a bullet in my brain if I had to live like that. |
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We live in NoVA, nice house, ton of money towards daycare for two little kids, etc. We save big for retirement, have a good portfolio, etc.
One thing we are NOT doing is saving to bankroll 50k a year -per kid - for ridiculous fancy colleges. I'm a professional and both DH and I went to state schools ("gasp" lol). People in my profession are obsessed with college....but we all work in the same office so..... Expensive college is not necessary for most people, especially since VA has such excellent public schools. We'll do a 529 but that's it. |
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My relatives and friends from my smallish southern city live very differently. It is a God will provide mentality for sure. It can be very up or down. They all have nice houses and boats and other toys when they are flush, then a recession hits and because it's a smallish town, there are no jobs. Everyone has a car repo, foreclosure, whatever on their credit record. There are plenty of men working blue collar jobs who have worked their way up and are making 70-80K plus whatever a wife might bring home--a princely sum down there and enough for all the toys, etc.--and then either overtime gets cut or they throw out their back at 50 and never work again. So be careful what you wish for.
That said, there are plenty of financially conservative people too, who save and scrimp and act more like your typical DCUrbanMom Money And Finances Forum Poster, but they aren't the ones who are flashy so there's nothing to point to. |
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I have noticed that, compared to my friends from my medium-sized hometown in the Midwest, I definitely have the smallest and oldest house. Their houses are much newer, nicer, and bigger. They also seem to take great tropical vacations every winter.
But I have a question for all the posters above -- how would you have any way of knowing whether your friends have saved much for retirement, or what their salaries all? |
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I think that here, incomes are higher, but so is cost of living and stress.
Not everyone, but I do think there is a contingent of rush now, save now, relax later. Put money in the bank, save for kids education and do all of this so that we can live here for the shortest possible duration and then move on to somewhere less hectic. My friends in PA aren't as focused on 'getting out' or saving because they see themselves working 5-10 years longer than I do which reduces the stress on your savings quite a bit. I am making and saving a lot more but I also need to live off of that money for a longer time. |
A PP here-yes I'm white American and one of the things that makes me happy about having left my small town is the lack of diversity there. So yeah, I can see your point. |
| No, but their life goals are different than mine are. They don't care about retiring early, donating to charity or leaving an estate to their children. |
Op here. Either because we've directly talked about it (both about salaries and retirement savings/plans---these very are good friends) or because their salaries are public knowledge or they work in the same field that I do. It's not hard to guesstimate a salary. I.e. I'm a nurse. I can pretty accurately guess what another nurse makes. But mostly it's because we've shared this info with each other. |
This is a good point. People here are deferring gratification. Lots of them have had that habit since long ago and it's the reason they are able to come here, work hard, and leave. |
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I know for me -- I came from one of the south jersey towns mentioned above; first went to NYC and now DC. While my parents always saved consistently, growing up there was near DAILY talk of layoffs at my kitchen table. And the there were layoffs which happened at age 60 or 58 or whenever when the plan was to work a few more yrs to continue saving, and yet it just wasn't possible to get a new job at that age without having to undertake a huge move. And this was for a father in what DCUM always calls a "marketable" industry -- engineering (it isn't -- not nearly as much as people think bc it is very easy to oursource jobs to others countries where there are very good math skills).
So given that background, I've always fallen into the -- work as hard as you can and earn and invest as much as you can while young bc you just don't know what the market/economy/employability will be like when you're older. Go to NYC or DC if you have to to make money. My friends back home -- still in south jersey -- don't see it that way at ALL. They say -- enjoy it while you can bc who knows how it'll be when you're older. |
Well, OP should come back and explain, but it sounded to me that she did not mean affluent families. Plus, DC has a huge over-concentration of affluent families. HHIs of 300K are not common in most places the way they are here. |
I agree with you. OP should clarify, but I interpreted this to be a comparison btw DC and "real America", not a comparison btw DC and NYC, SF, etc. The question raised in the OP was whether others agreed with the premise that lower-income "Real America" folks save less (retirement, kids' college, etc.) than do higher-income yuppie folks. |
That's interesting to hear! I have no clue what any of my family members or friends makes or has invested. My parents were always of the view that you cannot discuss these things. As a result, for example, I have no clue how much my mom has to live on when she retires (she's 71 years old and still loves her career). She seems to have a fair bit of money, but I have no way of knowing (and definitely cannot ask her.) I see she has tons of binders from various investment firms in her home office closet (presumably containing statements), and know she's very smart, but I have no clue. |
While I don't live in Northern Virginia anymore, I will say that I am/was more like your friends in other places than I am like you. So, I do think there are some of your friends' types in DC-land. Being a SAHM, I probably saw more of them than I did of high-powered two career couple families. But I agree that part of living in the DC area or other competitive, high-income places is the pressure to do more, make more, get into the best college, get the high-powered job, etc. Those areas also attract a lot of Type-A personalities that are suited to that lifestyle. I, however, am Type-B and don't feel like I need the best of everything or even the best of anything. Don't get me wrong, we are saving for retirement, and we plan to pay for our kids' college educations - hopefully in-state schools. But after quitting my job after kid number 3, I, too, am pretty much done working in the corporate world. And I, too, have a graduate degree. Life is hectic enough taking care of a household, 3 kids, and a dog, handling the finances, planning our vacations, cooking dinner each night, etc. is enough. I'd rather stay at a Hampton Inn and not work than stay at the Ritz Carlton and work, if that makes sense. My husband made $120K when we left the DC area 5 years ago, which many people on DCUM think is hardly anything. But when you're not paying daycare or needing to commute or buy work clothes, it's not that bad. And we still managed to do the big things - saved for retirement and saved for college. But in order to be a SAHM, we lived in an old 1950s ranch house, shopped at discount stores and thrift stores, kids went to public schools, and will probably go to public colleges. We now moved to an area that has a lower cost of living, but truthfully, we just got a bigger, newer house than our small ranch in NoOVA, so our cost of living hasn't really gone down, and our lifestyle is the same. That lifestyle is/was good enough for me both in the DC area and outside it. I know it's not for everyone, though. |
I am the first PP quoted here and I am living in an area you would call "real America." Not a big city. Still, there are affluent and rich people here as well. You can find them anywhere. |