Anonymous wrote:Class is more about lifestyle than income and assets. Most places in the US, we would have a more upper class lifestyle, but we live close to DC and so we’re UMC.
UMC - we own our home and drive well maintained, reliable cars. We go on 1-2 vacations a year and pay for travel sports and music lessons for kids in local public schools. We own stocks and we save money for retirement and college. We work in white-collar knowledge based jobs. We have investments and will inherit money, but we will need to work full time until a traditional retirement age of 65.
Upper class is like UMC but has 2 or more of the following:
kids in private school
2nd home
2+ vacations, some international or luxury accommodations
Doesn’t need to work a W-2 job or is able to work a passion job
Home is professionally decorated and/or landscaped
Makes most decisions based on personal preferences instead of cost/value/ROI
Really this is the key piece.
I'm sorry, but if you can't afford to maintain your lifestyle if you stop working, you're not UC.
Middle class is like UMC except instead of being a relaxing, enjoyable lifestyle they have to budget carefully to make it all work. They make choices between retirement and college saving. They may have to choose between expensive extracurriculars for the kids and vacations. If they don’t make sacrifices or trade offs, they are living in debt or can never retire.
Anonymous wrote:You’re upper class if you can buy a $30 million dollar house today; pay with cash only and with not a worry about the financial impacts of the purchase.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Upper class doesnt have to work. They can live on dividends and businesses.
This is nothing more than a definition of convenience so that you can sit there and claim that you are a humble denizen of the middle class despite earning a million plus per year because it takes a job to be able to continue to afford a principle home worth 3+ million and at least 1 vacation home worth more than a million and 3 to 5 luxury vacations every year. And yes, I understand you only get rooms at the four Seasons and not suites. And yes, I understand you don't have a private plane or a personal chef. You're still rich.
Why are you so angry about this? Being rich and being upper class aren't the same thing. Upper class is inherited wealth, not someone who worked their way up and now makes $1M in big law.
I'm not saying we live a humble lifestyle with a HHI of $500K but we also can't afford to not work. We didn't get any money from our parents or other relatives. No trusts or anything. We both work every day. We are not upper class.
You’re what that article would have called “working wealthy.”
It may seem like splitting hairs, but the higher you go on the income/net worth ladder, the differences become exponential. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_in_the_United_States
These figures are based on tax returns. The top 25% income was $94k and the top 20% was $110k. Pretty close to each other. But there’s a huge gap between the top 5% ($252k) and the top 1% ($682k). And the top .1% is $3.7 million!
Anonymous wrote:Upper class doesnt have to work. They can live on dividends and businesses.
Anonymous wrote:I am from England where we have a real class system, based on birth, education, profession rather than just finances.
Here in the US the "class" system is a joke.
Anonymous wrote:Upper class doesnt have to work. They can live on dividends and businesses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Part of the problem here is the term "class" has as much to do with culture, connections, and family as it does it income. Most of the commenters here are really debating about levels of income or wealth (those terms are different but related) and not the broader term of class. However, even if using class as a proxy for wealth and income, there really needs to be a distinction between "wealthy" and truly upper class and all that comes with.
Who in the US would be upper class though? I can think of Chappy Morris. Who else?!
There is no upper class in the US. None.
I think Americans associate the idea of an upper class with the old aristocracies of England and Europe. It's kind of offensive to the "American idea." So nobody wants to identify with it. Most just think it's basically billionaires, CEOs and celebrities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guarantee you the top 9% of the wealthiest people in the U.S. make more than 300k per year.
This makes no sense. The 90th percentile for HH incomes is $216K. 300K comes in at around the 95th or 96th percentile. So no, the "top tenth" are not *all* pulling at least 300K.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Part of the problem here is the term "class" has as much to do with culture, connections, and family as it does it income. Most of the commenters here are really debating about levels of income or wealth (those terms are different but related) and not the broader term of class. However, even if using class as a proxy for wealth and income, there really needs to be a distinction between "wealthy" and truly upper class and all that comes with.
Who in the US would be upper class though? I can think of Chappy Morris. Who else?!
There is no upper class in the US. None.
Anonymous wrote:I guarantee you the top 9% of the wealthiest people in the U.S. make more than 300k per year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Part of the problem here is the term "class" has as much to do with culture, connections, and family as it does it income. Most of the commenters here are really debating about levels of income or wealth (those terms are different but related) and not the broader term of class. However, even if using class as a proxy for wealth and income, there really needs to be a distinction between "wealthy" and truly upper class and all that comes with.
Who in the US would be upper class though? I can think of Chappy Morris. Who else?!
There is no upper class in the US. None.
in the back of the Wolf Trap playbill https://community.wolftrap.org/campaign/partners/donor-list there are multiple people--living individuals and couples--who donate $1M or more every year. That's to one arts non-profit. Pick a city, pick a museum/theater/university/hospital, you will see there are plenty of people with plenty of money to drop.
At any vacation destination -- skiing, beach, mountains -- there are high end timeshare communities that cost $1M or more for a 13-week share https://www.sprucepeak.com/pdf/spruce-peak-club-2024.pdf. People will have condos and cabins in multiple locations so they can go where they want, when they want--NYC, Vail, Diamond Head, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Part of the problem here is the term "class" has as much to do with culture, connections, and family as it does it income. Most of the commenters here are really debating about levels of income or wealth (those terms are different but related) and not the broader term of class. However, even if using class as a proxy for wealth and income, there really needs to be a distinction between "wealthy" and truly upper class and all that comes with.
Who in the US would be upper class though? I can think of Chappy Morris. Who else?!
There is no upper class in the US. None.