The Shrinking Middle Class

July 2, 2019

 

There has been a lot of talk about the middle class getting squeezed and the numbers below bear this out.  Take a look at the graphs.  What does this mean to the average worker?
 

  • Rent, medical costs and tuition have increased more than income, shrinking savings.
  • The median hourly wage in the U.S. is $27.35.
  • Since 1995, compensation for graduate degree holders has risen 28%.  Despite all the tech companies saying you don’t need a degree, the numbers don’t tell the same story.  I am happy to say my fourth child, Claire, just earned her undergraduate degree from LSU. All four of our kids have now graduated with at least a bachelors degree.  This statistic is one of the reasons why we pushed our kids to go to college.
  • Since 1995, compensation for those with only a High School diploma has only risen 5%.—This segment should be focused on a trade where the compensation is much higher.

 
This article was written at the end of 2018.  There is some evidence that wages are starting to rise pretty rapidly for those with only a HS diploma.  Let’s hope that continues.

Give me a call or email me if you would like to discuss this any further. 

 

Craig
602.954.3762
ccoppola@leearizona.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Shrinking Middle Class: By the Numbers

By Nicolas Rapp and Matthew Heimer
Fortune
December 20, 2018

The American middle-class ideal was forged in the decades after World War II, when economic growth and wage increases climbed in lockstep for nearly 30 years. That pairing dissolved abruptly in the 1970s. Between 1973 and 2017, according to the Economic Policy Institute, the productivity of the economy grew 77%—but average compensation rose only 12.4%, adjusted for inflation. This divergence coincided with a shift in economic gravity, away from manufacturing and toward services and “knowledge industries.” That shift weakened the labor unions that had helped rank-and-file workers in many professions claim a bigger share of the bounty. Just as important were tax reforms that favored investment and real estate earnings over wage income. The upshot: an economic order in which the capital-owning class enjoys great advantages—and the costs of admission to and exclusion from that class grow ever higher.

shrinking middle class 1

The Tightening Squeeze of City Living
The information revolution has increased the concentration of jobs in certain U.S. cities, especially in a few hotly competitive coastal metro areas. That dynamic has driven housing costs beyond what many middle-class earners can afford, making it harder for them to save for home ownership or other financial goals. (The median U.S. hourly wage was $27.35 in November; it’s lower in most of the Midwest and South.)
Methodology info (PDF)

shrinking middle class 2

To The Victors Go The Spoils
Tax breaks for investors and property owners have helped concentrate wealth among the top 10%. The growing impact of higher education on earnings has had a similar effect. Since 1995, average income for graduate degree holders has risen 28%; for those with only a high-school diploma, that figure is 5%.

shrinking middle class 3

In Awkward Global Company
The bottom 90% of U.S. earners take home a smaller share of income than do their counterparts in most industrial economies—including in far less free societies like China’s.

shrinking middle class 4

Purchasing Power And Savings Wane
Incomes haven’t risen as fast as rent, medical costs, or tuition—three of the biggest burdens for U.S. households. As a result, savings rates have declined, leaving middle-class earners more vulnerable to being bankrupted by an emergency or a job loss—and less able to put away money for retirement or for future generations.

 

Search

Join The C2 Voice™

Sign up to receive The C2 Voice™. You will receive insightful and concise comments on all things commercial real estate and other interesting topics. Look below to see our archived narratives.

Join The C2 Voice™

Sign up to receive The C2 Voice™. You will receive insightful and concise comments on all things commercial real estate and other interesting topics. Look below to see our archived narratives.

Join The C2 Voice™

Sign up to receive The C2 Voice™. You will receive insightful and concise comments on all things commercial real estate and other interesting topics. Look below to see our archived narratives.

Scroll to Top
Skip to content