Breaking news: in one of the most productive countries / economies in the entire history of humanity, the majority of people creating that productivity do not get to enjoy the rewards of that productivity.

same as it ever was.

  • @OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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    317 months ago

    If only we were back in the good Ole days of 2019 with the economy roaring and 78% of people reporting living paycheck to paycheck according to CareerBuilder.

    It’s PROBABLY a measurement problem, not an actual number with insight on how people are living. People self report incorrectly to a lot of things, and paycheck-to-paycheck can mean a lot of things. We think of it as someone who might be homeless without their paycheck but someone who would have to sell some stocks or stop retirement contributions might also think of themselves as “paycheck to paycheck.”

    If you are working, your paycheck is probably a big part of your budget. That makes this survey question a bit meaningless.

    • BraveSirZaphod
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      187 months ago

      You’re spot on here. Plenty of people count maxing out their 401k and IRA as “living paycheck to paycheck”, because their budgets would go upside if they missed a paycheck and did literally nothing to cover it.

      Combine that with the general bias all people have to view themselves as generally normal and you get a pretty meaningless metric.

    • SuiXi3D
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      127 months ago

      but someone who would have to sell some stocks or stop retirement contributions might also think of themselves as “paycheck to paycheck.”

      Oh, like I had to do when I moved to another apartment? I had to wipe out my (tiny) Roth IRA just to pay the deposit. My wife had to wipe hers out just to pay the movers and all the other BS fees. We now have no retirement savings and haven’t since we moved six months ago. We both had to stop contributing to our IRAs in order to continue paying the bills. We’re not even paycheck to paycheck at this point, we’re at month to month.

      • Flying Squid
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        87 months ago

        We just had to refinance our mortgage because our credit card debt was out of control and the payments were too high.

        But it did nothing to help with student loans or medical debts.

      • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        27 months ago

        Yeah, I had to empty my 401k to be able to just keep renting and I’ve decided that it’s probably not worth paying towards anymore since by the time I would retire they likely would tell me I need at least 8 times whatever I could afford to put in so I’ll just plan for death as my retirement like Boeing would want.

        • SuiXi3D
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          37 months ago

          Pretty much. I’m very much resigned to the fact that I’ll be working well after the standard retirement age and will likely die at work, with nothing but debt to pass on to… nobody because I can’t afford to have children.

          • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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            17 months ago

            Boeing actually found the longer you work the shorter you live so good news you won’t work past retirement you will work until you die and then retirement age won’t exist. It will be a myth from the past.

    • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      77 months ago

      but someone who would have to sell some stocks or stop retirement contributions might also think of themselves as “paycheck to paycheck.”

      And some people think the Earth is flat…

      But neither population is statistically significant

  • Melkath
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    257 months ago

    Hey, but everyone, the 1% are doin’ great and Biden needs his re-election, so the economy is super stronk!

    • @njm1314@lemmy.world
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      137 months ago

      How ignorant can a comment even be? I mean just the idea that the current economy and state of wealth inequality is Joe Biden’s fault is astounding. The previous administration gave biggest handout to the 1% of any government in the history of mankind.

      But that’s just the history of America for the last 40 years I guess. Republicans administrations gutting things, giving massive handouts to the rich, destroying social safety nets, allowing corruption and fraud to go rampant, etc… then when a democratic administration tries to clean it up just a little bit, to stabilize things, all the mouth breathers suddenly forget everything happened beforehand.

      • @Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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        37 months ago

        Good thing that Biden isn’t fixing that but is instead spending all his time trying to throw more bombs on babies.

          • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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            37 months ago

            Honestly I think people are just tired of being stuck between a rock and a hard place of literal authoritarianism and apathetic stagnation. Even if one is clearly better people are desperate for change and the best leader that we have to look up to is a stuttering old man who complained he wasn’t paid enough while being extremely upperclass and having a stay at home nanny for his kids.

            People crave representation and I can see why they complain about the extreme lack of it. And lashing out at the downtrodden do not get them to feel better. You can’t whip a smile onto someone’s face.

              • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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                27 months ago

                Fair on the stutter part but not sure what to call it when he struggles with words but especially in the case of Trump who literally can’t remember and stumbles his way through sentences. Cause it is not perfectly fine coherent speech that I expect from people over 80

      • Melkath
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        27 months ago

        Lots of words by a dolt who just doesn’t get it.

        I get it. You voted Hilary. Like a dolt.

      • @hpca01@programming.dev
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        17 months ago

        Don’t get me wrong I hate the prior guy. But isn’t it always funny how the Democratic party in their times of super majority don’t tend to fix the shit entirely that the last guy rammed through. Take the tax cuts and removing alot of deductions for the working class. Wouldn’t it make sense to undo those tax cuts and tax increases?

        Both sides aren’t the same but this ain’t a left vs right issue, it’s a class war.

    • Cosmic Cleric
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      7 months ago

      Lol some clown is removing my comments as “uncivil” in posts

      Violence is the only way that rights and freedoms have ever been secured. It has NEVER happened by voting

      Can’t disagree with this more.

      Advocating for violence is wrong, and that’s probably why you keep getting your comments removed.

      In fact I’ll go so far as to say that if we rely on violence every time to resolve issues then there’ll be nothing left but cockroaches and dolphins looking around the scorched Earth wondering “What the fuck happened here?!”

        • Cosmic Cleric
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          17 months ago

          Everything good you have-especially as a US citizen- is the result of violence and nothing else.

          If you’re talking about overthrowing tyrants to become a free nation, then yeah /agree violence is most likely needed.

          But the whole point of America and its political system is to resolve conflict in non-violet ways, so definately think your’e wrong there. Violence begets violence and destroys your land/homes.

            • Cosmic Cleric
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              17 months ago

              Also, for the record, our system is absolutely not set up to resolve conflicts in nonviolent ways.

              You need to justify that statement with real-country examples, because unless your definition of “violence” is different than it is for the rest of us, your comment is easily proven false.

            • Cosmic Cleric
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              17 months ago

              How does any vote get passed in Congress today? Congress has votes and passes laws all the time without violence.

                • Cosmic Cleric
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                  17 months ago

                  Seriously, how can you possibly live through the last couple of years of Roe and associated laws and decide there is no violence??!

                  Our definition of ‘violence’ differs.

      • @zbyte64
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        17 months ago

        Well to be fair, he didn’t say which side would be committing the violence. One analysis of the civil rights movement is that is was successful because it provoked violence by the oppressors while cameras were present.

        • Cosmic Cleric
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          17 months ago

          Well to be fair, he didn’t say which side would be committing the violence.

          I speak towards violence of any kind, from either side. Self-defense notwithstanding.

        • @SCB@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          You’re wrong, and your advocation of violence is abhorrent. Democracy does indeed work and your calls for the destruction of society over your power fantasy are awful and misplaced.

          • @AdolfSchmitler@lemmy.world
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            77 months ago

            How is he “advocating” for violence? Where is his call to action?? Stop being so allergic to uncomfortable conversations. He is right. Look at all the big triumphs over tyranny that have happened throughout history, they were achieved through violence. Do you think America voted their way out of British rule? Do you think Ukraine can vote Russia out of their country?

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              17 months ago

              Look at all the big triumphs over tyranny that have happened throughout history

              In context, this argument makes no sense, because he is advocating violence against random wealthy people in the US.

              • @zbyte64
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                27 months ago

                They said nothing about the violence being random. If anything, it would take some planning.

  • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    117 months ago

    Ugh, poor people and their disgusting lifestyle choice of having no money.

    Can’t they just dip into their trustfunds if they’re short?

    • @zbyte64
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      27 months ago

      Trustfunds? You think every success is a Rockefeller or something? Just ask as family member for a million dollar loan to start a business, that’s how all the modern greats have done it. (/s plz don’t hurt me)

  • @dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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    107 months ago

    Remember this the next time someone says “what the market will bear.”

    Unchecked capitalism is about aggressively exploiting resources. We, our time, and whatever we posses of value, are all such resources.

  • Cosmic Cleric
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    7 months ago

    Really need to bring back the ‘New Deal’ era laws and regulations.

    Waiting for raw Capitalism to ‘lift all boats’ just won’t happen, as only the strongest ‘boats’ survive the storms.

    Capitalisms default mode is ‘let them eat cake’.

  • @YoBuckStopsHere@lemmy.world
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    97 months ago

    What I have seen is that the issue is now at the local economy level. In the urban areas costs have returned to pre-2020 prices. In rural areas the prices are still extremely high. Gas in a urban area is around $2.30 while in rural areas it’s $3.15. Milk prices are about a 0.75 a gallon difference as well. Life sucks if you live in the middle of nowhere, but it’s not bad if you live close to a urban area. The price difference appears to be due to transportation costs. It just isn’t worth the logistics to support rural communities anymore for most companies.

    • ThrowawayOnLemmy
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      7 months ago

      You keep saying this. Got a source?

      Gas near me in my urban area is at $2.90 and milk is $3.15 a gallon. Prices are still way up on most essential goods, but they’ve stopped climbing. Wages sure as hell haven’t kept up either. And rent went up higher last year than ever.

      • Drusas
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        27 months ago

        Gas is a little under $5 a gallon in my urban area.

      • @force@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Gas in my commute town in rural Georgia and nearby rural towns is around $2.90-3.20, in Macon it’s $2.70-2.80, Savannah it’s $2.70-2.80, in Augusta it’s $2.80-2.90, and in Atlanta it’s $3.20. My area has over 50k people, Macon has 234k people, Savannah 405k, Augusta 611k, and Atlanta 6.1 million. Based off of this limited data I could guess smaller urban areas have lower prices, which rise the larger they get until they eventually meet or surpass rural prices. But then you can look at Colombus with 330k population and their gas prices are $2.50-2.60, but then again it’s partially in Alabama which might explain the lower prices (Alabamans are poor af)

    • Flying Squid
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      57 months ago

      I don’t know about that. I live in a small city, but it’s a depressed community. Gas here has been under $3.00. This weekend, we went to visit my mother in a slightly larger city, but it is a desirable city, and gas was over $3.10.

      So it’s not really all about urban and rural. There are urban areas people want to live in and there are urban areas that people are less interested in living in and the latter are also cheaper despite being urban.

      I just looked at a good example. Gary, IN and Chicago, IL.

      According to Gas Buddy, gas in Gary is around $2.75/gallon. Gas in Chicago is around $3.10/gallon. Gary definitely counts as urban.

      Meanwhile, nearby but rural Winamac, IN (I picked it at random)- $3.10. Same as Chicago.

  • @SCB@lemmy.world
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    27 months ago

    I am unable to find (and would love a link) any data on population distribution through the quintiles of income.