Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Id be interested to know what job that requires a college education pays less than $100k.
Literally most of them. Let me guess, you're a lawyer.
Browse a very long list of professions here: http://www1.salary.com Note that $80k and up are considered "high income" on Salary.com
These are not averages in DC. Legal secretaries with not even high school educations earn $80k plus.
I know someone who is a legal secretary and earns $60k, with a high school degree. And I seriously doubt that lawyers are hiring high-school dropouts very often.
I know dental assistants in DC with no degree that earn $85k. When i hear these so-called professionals say they top out in their career at 80k, me thinks it more to do with them than the career path. A modest DC gov job doing nothing will pay $75k easily.
Anonymous wrote:Rich is having enough food to eat, clothes to wear, a safe place to sleep , decent medical care, being able send your children (especially female children) to school AND having enough leftover to save for tomorrow, go on an occasional vacation to visit family, eat at a restaurant once in a while or buying anything on a whim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rich is having enough food to eat, clothes to wear, a safe place to sleep , decent medical care, being able send your children (especially female children) to school AND having enough leftover to save for tomorrow, go on an occasional vacation to visit family, eat at a restaurant once in a while or buying anything on a whim.
That's not rich. That's called doing okay or getting by.
Yes it is
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Id be interested to know what job that requires a college education pays less than $100k.
Literally most of them. Let me guess, you're a lawyer.
Browse a very long list of professions here: http://www1.salary.com Note that $80k and up are considered "high income" on Salary.com
These are not averages in DC. Legal secretaries with not even high school educations earn $80k plus.
I know someone who is a legal secretary and earns $60k, with a high school degree. And I seriously doubt that lawyers are hiring high-school dropouts very often.
I know dental assistants in DC with no degree that earn $85k. When i hear these so-called professionals say they top out in their career at 80k, me thinks it more to do with them than the career path. A modest DC gov job doing nothing will pay $75k easily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Id be interested to know what job that requires a college education pays less than $100k.
Literally most of them. Let me guess, you're a lawyer.
Browse a very long list of professions here: http://www1.salary.com Note that $80k and up are considered "high income" on Salary.com
These are not averages in DC. Legal secretaries with not even high school educations earn $80k plus.
I know someone who is a legal secretary and earns $60k, with a high school degree. And I seriously doubt that lawyers are hiring high-school dropouts very often.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Id be interested to know what job that requires a college education pays less than $100k.
Literally most of them. Let me guess, you're a lawyer.
Browse a very long list of professions here: http://www1.salary.com Note that $80k and up are considered "high income" on Salary.com
These are not averages in DC. Legal secretaries with not even high school educations earn $80k plus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Id be interested to know what job that requires a college education pays less than $100k.
Literally most of them. Let me guess, you're a lawyer.
Browse a very long list of professions here: http://www1.salary.com Note that $80k and up are considered "high income" on Salary.com
These are not averages in DC. Legal secretaries with not even high school educations earn $80k plus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Id be interested to know what job that requires a college education pays less than $100k.
Literally most of them. Let me guess, you're a lawyer.
Browse a very long list of professions here: http://www1.salary.com Note that $80k and up are considered "high income" on Salary.com
Anonymous wrote:Rich is having enough food to eat, clothes to wear, a safe place to sleep , decent medical care, being able send your children (especially female children) to school AND having enough leftover to save for tomorrow, go on an occasional vacation to visit family, eat at a restaurant once in a while or buying anything on a whim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rich is having enough food to eat, clothes to wear, a safe place to sleep , decent medical care, being able send your children (especially female children) to school AND having enough leftover to save for tomorrow, go on an occasional vacation to visit family, eat at a restaurant once in a while or buying anything on a whim.
That's not rich. That's called doing okay or getting by.
Anonymous wrote:Rich is having enough food to eat, clothes to wear, a safe place to sleep , decent medical care, being able send your children (especially female children) to school AND having enough leftover to save for tomorrow, go on an occasional vacation to visit family, eat at a restaurant once in a while or buying anything on a whim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this what you are saying?
Below $50k= Poor
Between $50 and $100k = Middle class
Above $100k = rich
Middle class is roughly the 25th to 75th percentile. You know, the middle 50% of the earning curve. Nationwide the average HHI is around $60K, but in the DC metro region, it is closer to $90K. The 25th to 75th percentiles for this area are around $60-150K so that is essentially middle class. Over $150K you pass out of middle class and are affluent/upper class, but not rich/whatever you want to call it.
So over $150k is rich? Wow, I wish I could feel this way too. Unfortunately I've had glimpses behind the curtain and have seen of real wealth. It ruins you once you see it. Hedge fund wealth, executive wealth, small business owner wealth, etc. But keep telling yourself that $300k a year is rich. It makes getting through the day a lot easier not knowing the truth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this what you are saying?
Below $50k= Poor
Between $50 and $100k = Middle class
Above $100k = rich
Middle class is roughly the 25th to 75th percentile. You know, the middle 50% of the earning curve. Nationwide the average HHI is around $60K, but in the DC metro region, it is closer to $90K. The 25th to 75th percentiles for this area are around $60-150K so that is essentially middle class. Over $150K you pass out of middle class and are affluent/upper class, but not rich/whatever you want to call it.