Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:94th percentile for household income, 95th percentile for net worth by our age group. But our net worth is mostly because of a $400,000 inheritance and a $500,000 profit from selling our first house; we did nothing to earn any of it, really.
This is usually how it works.
Also, plenty of very smart and capable people choose careers that will never get them into a top income bracket but are very valuable, important, often challenging careers. Education, nursing, non-profit work, government service. Plus all the jobs that may not be as essential but bring so many of us joy -- restaurant work, making beer, making art, performers.
No one "earns" being rich, in the sense that the things it takes to become rich are generally no more valuable to society than other things. It usually just means your work is closer to sources of power and capital. That's why finance is so lucrative even though its net benefit to society is negligible (and honestly, most finance activity is actively bad for society).
Sure, but inheriting money or getting lucky on selling your house takes even less work than working does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:94th percentile for household income, 95th percentile for net worth by our age group. But our net worth is mostly because of a $400,000 inheritance and a $500,000 profit from selling our first house; we did nothing to earn any of it, really.
That is more common than you think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:94th percentile for household income, 95th percentile for net worth by our age group. But our net worth is mostly because of a $400,000 inheritance and a $500,000 profit from selling our first house; we did nothing to earn any of it, really.
This is usually how it works.
Also, plenty of very smart and capable people choose careers that will never get them into a top income bracket but are very valuable, important, often challenging careers. Education, nursing, non-profit work, government service. Plus all the jobs that may not be as essential but bring so many of us joy -- restaurant work, making beer, making art, performers.
No one "earns" being rich, in the sense that the things it takes to become rich are generally no more valuable to society than other things. It usually just means your work is closer to sources of power and capital. That's why finance is so lucrative even though its net benefit to society is negligible (and honestly, most finance activity is actively bad for society).
Anonymous wrote:94th percentile for household income, 95th percentile for net worth by our age group. But our net worth is mostly because of a $400,000 inheritance and a $500,000 profit from selling our first house; we did nothing to earn any of it, really.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous. We are just in the top 1 percent, by a whisker, but we are very far from rich.
After paying mortgages on our two homes, bills, private school, meals out, soirees, European vacations etc. there is very little left at the end of the month.
You have my sympathy!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this forum makes me feel so freaking poor
Richness in life is derived from family, friends and health. Sure, it’s helpful to have money but it only helps to an extent.
Poor people always say this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous. We are just in the top 1 percent, by a whisker, but we are very far from rich.
After paying mortgages on our two homes, bills, private school, meals out, soirees, European vacations etc. there is very little left at the end of the month.
Well done. You almost had me.
Anonymous wrote:94th percentile for household income, 95th percentile for net worth by our age group. But our net worth is mostly because of a $400,000 inheritance and a $500,000 profit from selling our first house; we did nothing to earn any of it, really.
Anonymous wrote:In 2020, my DH and I hit the 1 percent for HHI (in our early 50's). But we are far far far from the 1 percent in net worth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this forum makes me feel so freaking poor
Richness in life is derived from family, friends and health. Sure, it’s helpful to have money but it only helps to an extent.
Poor people always say this.