From the article....
We bought a new car this past year so our son could earn money for college delivering pizzas.
People will read in what they want to read in. How many posts commented about the article stating the new car was purchased for the son to drive to deliver pizzas?
If I went out and purchased a 2012 Honda Civic and gave it to my son to use to deliver pizza, the article statement would be true.
If I had a 1994 Honda Civic with 250,000 miles on it, and purchased a new car for myself so I could give my son the Honda to deliver pizzas, the article statement would also be true.
The amounts listed for utilities, cable/internet, insurance, car payment, and gas all sound pretty reasonable. From my experience, the groceries are pretty dead on as well. You all have seen me post that we spend about $250/week in groceries. We don't have multiple stores to hunt for sales, or even stores that have sales cheaper than
Walmart prices, nor do we have coupons available without it being another full time job (hours netted us savings of $2-3, which is accomplished by working 10 minutes over once a week....)
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My income is pretty much at the median. 10 years ago, we purchased a (reasonable cost) house. It costs about $200/month to heat in the winter. Fast forward 10 years and it suddenly cost $800 to heat. That's an increase of 400%. My income increase is about 10% for those 10 years.
Gas was about $1.30/gallon when I bought my house. It is now over $4 some places and very near $4 everywhere else. That is a 300% increase. Again, income increase was about 10%.
We spent about $300/month in groceries back then. Today, as I said, we spend about $1000. A 330% increase. Income increased by 10%.
My electric bill was maybe $50/month. Today, $125. 250% increase. Income 10% increase.
A new car cost about $200-250/month. A good used car, about $5000, or $100 if you financed. A crappy junk car that could be driven a few years before it fell apart for $500. Today, $350/month barely gets you in a new car, a good used car is barely less than a new car, and the junk car to drive a few years before it falls apart is about $2000. Call that 150% increase for new and good used car and 400% for a piece of crap. Again, 10% income increase.
All while median income rises about 10%, the people running the companies that have increased the purchase cost of items have increased nearly just as substantially as the products their companies are producing along with the record breaking profits of these companies.
You have 1000 people making $1 and 10 people making $10 running companies selling a product to the 1000 people When the income of those people increase by 10% and through the greed of the companies, the product purchase price increases by 400%, a majority of the 1000 people no longer purchase the product. The 10 people whom has increased their income along with the product cost are now making $40 and are the only ones who can purchase the product. They are making less product because they are selling less product not to others but mostly to themselves and they no longer need many of the 1000 people to work for them to make the products. A good chunk of the 1000 people are now out of a job, therefore buy even less of the products. That is where we are today.
10 years ago, a regular job was $10/hour, a good job was $20/hour, and a really good job was $30/hour. Fast forward, those same jobs are paying the same wages, but the cost of everything is increased 200-400%. That makes the regular job now a really crappy job, the good job a not quite as crappy job, and the really good job just something to get by on.