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Friday, Nov 22, 2024

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 As my father who owned an upholstery shop would say back in the day, “Let’s get down to brass tacks.” While we all want to believe things are better now than they were, for the majority of Americans, income inequality is worse than you thought. What’s more, it has little to do with political party, gender or race. As you will see, we are indeed all in this together.BC (before COVID-19), in April 2016, Forbes made it very clear that “90 percent of Americans are worse off than they were in the early 1970s.” Forbes former contributor, Panos Mourdoukoutas wrote: “Simply put, for the vast majority of Americans, the dream of a better life was lost back in the early 1970s. For the top 10 percent of the population, those with the right skills, an open American economy was a good thing, a source of efficiency and opportunity that translated into higher real incomes.“For the bottom 90 percent of the population, those with the wrong skills or little skills, the openness of the U.S. economy was a bad thing, a source of job losses and lower incomes.”Let’s dig deeper.

In 1970, the U.S. median household income was $9,870, and about $6,500 for African-Americans, according to what is now called the U.S. Census Bureau.

Today, average annual income is around $65,000, but $50,000 for Latinx, $40,000 for Blacks, and nearly $90,000 for Asian-Americans, says Pew Research.

When asked on news interviews to explain the Asian-American income advantage, I assert maybe we all should have spent more time in math and science classes!Let me suggest that when looking at income and wealth that we start with the averages in the United States. See how the Homer Simpsons of the country are doing first, then look at your family and your neighbors. Should you concentrate on the people you know, you will skew your results. The folks you are the closest to likely are above average in that you probably all have more education and earn more money. Remember with the presidential elections, it wasn’t the coasts that provided you with a clue as to the outcome. Simply see how Americans voted in the Midwest. Then you can go to bed. More often than not, you know the name of the winner when you wake up the next morning.

In my Crenshaw High School senior year in September 1970, I well remember the cost of my new Toyota Corolla was $2,176. With 1970 median household income around $10,000, that car cost about 20 percent of median income. With new Corollas selling north of $20,000 today, just to maintain the same 1970 standard of living, the median income needs to be $100,000 today.

No matter the complexion of the middle class, they have good reason to feel they have gotten squeezed. Because they have. At the same time the top 10 percent have done exceedingly well, especially with COVID-19, but not so much for the rest of United States. Since former President Donald Trump declared a national emergency due to the coronavirus, “614 U.S. billionaires grew their net worth $931 billion,” reports USA Today on Dec. 1.In 1970 the average home in California cost about $25,000, per realestateabc.com. So that means the price of a home was approximately 2.5 times your $10,000 median U.S. annual income.In January, single family homes in the San Fernando Valley hit a record high of $740,000, according to parkregency.com. Median household income in the same neighborhood is $71,691, per point2homes.com. That means it takes 10.4 times the income needed to buy a house. To keep buying power the equivalent, Valley area homeowners need to earn $296,000 so that home price is 2.5 times income.Zillow’s 2019 price-to-income ratio: Toledo, Ohio: 2.14; New York: 5.53; San Francisco: 8.79; and Los Angeles: 8.83.

The rich get richer and the poor (used to) get children.

If it were the case that the average American family, whether one or two people working, was earning $100,000 and more every year, I maintain we could all enjoy more satisfaction and less stress these days. As of September 2020, “one in four adults have had trouble paying their bills since the coronavirus outbreak started, a third have dipped into savings or retirement accounts to make ends meet, and about one in six have borrowed money from friends or family or gotten food from a food bank. As was the case earlier this year, these types of experiences continue to be more common among adults with lower income, those without a college degree, and Black and Hispanic Americans,” according to a Pew Research Center study.  For the majority of Americans, America doesn’t look as “exceptional” as it has in the past.John Grace owns Investor’s Advantage, a personal financial planning firm in Westlake Village.

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