Anonymous wrote:The thing is...for most "middle class" people in the country (considering the median income in the US is about 50K), regardless of cost of living of the area, being able to do things like:
a) take vacations that involve flying the whole family
b) save for retirement (yes, I know, DCUMers think it is necessary, but there are a whole lot of people who will work until they are unable and then live off of 20K on social security)
c) sometimes even purchase health insurance, if not covered by the employer
d) save for your kid's college education, or even have anything but the cheapest in-state college with scholarships, grants, and loans be an option at all for higher education
e) live in a house larger than 1500-2000 square feet
f) afford to live in a performing school district
g) send your kid to become socialized and school ready in a nice preschool program, rather than watching TV with grandma all day while mom's at work
makes you rich.
Being rich isn't never needing to worry about money--it is to many, being in a position where you can take care of the future rather than just the day to day. Affluence also changes people's standards of what is considered necessary and what "just covering the bills" includes. Regardless of how you "feel" earning in the top 2% of earners in the country makes you rich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Breaking news - "You're not rich if you spend all your money!!"
But you might still be WINNING!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After the bugaboo, 7 jeans, coach diaper bag, lexus SUV, folks are a hurtin'- these things are all bona fide necessities for the 250ker. Social ostracism is inevitable without them.
You really need to get a reality check. We make $300,000 and we don't have any of these things. That was the point of the article, if you bothered to read it. We don't spend our money on crap, we save.
Call on the BS- I've met very few 300k folks who don't spend on indulgences of some kind- might not be the things on this list, but the majority certainly do...if you don't, you are most certainly the exception to the rule and unusually frugal...
We make $400K and don't spend on any of that. Then again, we had our first million before our youngest was out of diapers in our late 30s, and we're self made.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can't "make ends meet" on $250K, you're doing something wrong. I don't care where you live.
Seriously.
Anonymous wrote:If you can't "make ends meet" on $250K, you're doing something wrong. I don't care where you live.
Anonymous wrote:
3000 SQRFT Newer House (less than 10 years old) In a Good neighborhood (Mclean, Vienna, Bethesda etc...), WITHOUT previous housing appreciation as a downpayment (starting fresh)
NOT private school (because you are in the above neighborhood)
Pay for Health Insurance, Utilities / Gas / Food, going out to eat on the weekends, weekend activities
Save and later pay for your 2.5 kid's 4 year colleges
2 $40K cars (payment meaning 2-3 years old)
Someone to cut lawn
Someone to clean your house
If you are younger, childcare for your 2.5 kids
After school activities
Car for your teenagers
Retain your same lifestyle in retirement minus a house payment (assuming you pay your house off)
Anonymous wrote:I can relate to this.
We are are a two income family and combined make about 300k. Between Pre-school, the au pair, the mortgage, the car payments, the child support to my husbands ex, we net very little for savings or extravagant vacations....we are lucky to just pay our month to month expenses.
I'm sure some will gawk at how a HHI income of 300k barely makes it.
Anonymous wrote:if you want the generic "american dream" in the DC area 250K isn't enough let alone be "rich". Rich in IMO is exceeding the american dream and having money to spend on extra things like a vacation house, extravagent international family vacations, first class airplane tickets for your whole family and still exceed the "american dream" standard.
The generic american dream IMO is the following:
3000 SQRFT Newer House (less than 10 years old) In a Good neighborhood (Mclean, Vienna, Bethesda etc...), WITHOUT previous housing appreciation as a downpayment (starting fresh)
NOT private school (because you are in the above neighborhood)
Pay for Health Insurance, Utilities / Gas / Food, going out to eat on the weekends, weekend activities
Save and later pay for your 2.5 kid's 4 year colleges
2 $40K cars (payment meaning 2-3 years old)
Someone to cut lawn
Someone to clean your house
If you are younger, childcare for your 2.5 kids
After school activities
Car for your teenagers
Retain your same lifestyle in retirement minus a house payment (assuming you pay your house off)
Anonymous wrote:$250k probably puts you in the top 10% in just about any hood, except maybe parts of Georgetown and Great Falls. But even there, I suspect you're above the median.
Or is this another, "poor suffering rich people" thread, so we can justify squashing the workplace rights of teachers making $60k a year?