Why A $100,000 Salary Can’t Buy The American Dream

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  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2024
  • More than half (52%) of Americans say they would need at least $100,000 a year to be financially comfortable, according to the August 2023 CNBC Your Money Survey. It’s becoming increasingly more difficult to achieve the American Dream, especially as younger generations are beginning their adulthood with thousands of dollars in student loans. Watch the video above to learn more about how much it costs to achieve the American Dream.
    Chapters:
    0:00 Introduction
    1:35 Cost of living
    3:30 Rise in consumer debt
    6:29 Changing American Dream
    Produced by: Charlotte Morabito
    Edited by: Nora Rappaport
    Animation: Jason Reginato, Christina Locopo
    Supervising Producer: Lindsey Jacobson
    Additional Footage: Getty Images
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    Why A $100,000 Salary Can’t Buy The American Dream

Komentáře • 7K

  • @CNBC
    @CNBC  Před 20 dny +30

    Want to make extra money outside of your day job? Take CNBC’s new online course How to Earn Passive Income Online to learn about common passive income streams. Register today: cnb.cx/3Iwblnk

    • @Johnashward212
      @Johnashward212 Před 18 dny +42

      Lmfao. The linked course costs $152. “Omg everyone is so broke! Here buy our online course!!”

    • @Bookhermit
      @Bookhermit Před 18 dny +10

      Total scams- essentially commissioned sales jobs that are semi-automated.

    • @DRDRADR4
      @DRDRADR4 Před 18 dny +3

      ​@Johnashward212 it's a never ending cycle

    • @Zaiqukaj
      @Zaiqukaj Před 14 dny +8

      This isn’t a pitch I was expecting to see on a news channel.

    • @ccrozz99
      @ccrozz99 Před 12 dny +9

      A news channel promoting a pyramid scheme? Yikes.

  • @JonathanTacoman
    @JonathanTacoman Před 26 dny +5902

    100k is the new 60k

    • @violent_bebop9687
      @violent_bebop9687 Před 26 dny +261

      One way to fix this problem is to limit immigration. Prices will fall and families will be given a break.
      It's that simple.

    • @tonyazzaro9593
      @tonyazzaro9593 Před 26 dny +458

      ​@@violent_bebop9687
      Show your work, please.

    • @ricardomorales1039
      @ricardomorales1039 Před 26 dny

      How come? It's not that easy in the end everything is connected worldwide ​@@violent_bebop9687

    • @coltonwilliams1559
      @coltonwilliams1559 Před 26 dny +248

      @@violent_bebop9687umm no it’s not… go back to the rock you live under

    • @JonathanTacoman
      @JonathanTacoman Před 26 dny

      @@violent_bebop9687 idk what they’re doing nowadays but I was told immigrants pay taxes and get absolutely NO benefits. Some get payed under the table and get absolutely NO benefits from the gov. They can’t even open credit cuz they don’t have social security numbers. Maybe in NY and CAL they get some help but most states don’t help them

  • @OhWell0
    @OhWell0 Před 24 dny +1483

    I'm 37 and have been working all my life to get to 100k per year. And now that it's on my doorstep, it's not enough. Absolutely ridiculous.

    • @captainkill21
      @captainkill21 Před 23 dny +80

      Yup. I live in NY and finally cleared 100k in 2022 and even made up to $150k but after taxes and all of the increases in living, it doesn’t go as far as I’d hope it would smh

    • @kensmith2796
      @kensmith2796 Před 23 dny +62

      It's because minimum wage has essentially become $20-$25/hour, which is 40k-50k a year. Two fast food workers can now be a 100k/year household.

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 Před 23 dny +26

      I wish my first minimum wage back in 2015 paid 25/hr!!!

    • @roxanneg6538
      @roxanneg6538 Před 23 dny +6

      where do you live? Are u by yourself or have a family?

    • @DABK2024
      @DABK2024 Před 23 dny +34

      Hope you enjoyed your free Covid Gov Bucks. Well, it was free then, we're all paying for it now.

  • @emersonstagnitta65
    @emersonstagnitta65 Před 21 dnem +930

    Now imagine those of us living on less/way less. It's exhausting

    • @hildredscali1754
      @hildredscali1754 Před 21 dnem +19

      And that is why you should have more than 1 source of income. As a 9-5er earning less than a 100k, I made more than twice my income last year from only stocks and freelance developing. I also experiment with a couple of other things. It's way harder to make money plans when it's coming from just a source No Matter How Well It Pays.

    • @planetsaver
      @planetsaver Před 21 dnem +24

      They always make it sound so easy lol. tried to buy stocks some weeks back and came out with way less. would have been better off lavishing it on other things and living the American dream lol.

    • @Patriciacraig599
      @Patriciacraig599 Před 21 dnem +13

      Calm down, you probably rushed into it without asking questions. You must either understand the market well enough or get the services of a fin. adviser who does for your "investment" to count. I have gotten close to a hundred grand within the past few months only after some months of throwing my money in the wind. You should try again, good thing is you now know better. Goodluck!

    • @marguritekostecki2194
      @marguritekostecki2194 Před 21 dnem +4

      i've got similar problems and I have also considered using an FA but I don't know how to go about it. please, what are the steps for getting one? like a really good one.

    • @Patriciacraig599
      @Patriciacraig599 Před 21 dnem +7

      You should start by looking out for those from known firms and good track records. You should also make sure the person is licensed. Personally, I use Kelly Matwick. She's good and you could also look her up.

  • @Charlotte03849
    @Charlotte03849 Před 15 dny +514

    You work for 40yrs to have $1m in your retirement, Meanwhile some people are putting just $10k in a meme coin for just few months and now they are multi millionaires. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life

    • @PranatiSahoo-yg3gp
      @PranatiSahoo-yg3gp Před 15 dny

      Thanks for continuing updates I'd rather trade the stock market as it's more profitable. I make an average of $34,500 per week even though I barely trade myself.

    • @sara_top80
      @sara_top80 Před 15 dny

      I'm favoured financially, Thank you Jesus $32,000 weekly profit regardless of how bad it gets on the economy.

    • @keithcarvey48
      @keithcarvey48 Před 15 dny

      How
      ..? Am a newbie in crypto investment, please can you guide me through on how you made profit?

    • @toni_leyn
      @toni_leyn Před 15 dny

      Thanks to Mrs Maria Davis.

    • @toni_leyn
      @toni_leyn Před 15 dny

      She's a licensed broker here in the states

  • @phillipjames453
    @phillipjames453 Před 26 dny +1901

    CEO wages have definetly kept up with the cost of living.

    • @willriley1619
      @willriley1619 Před 26 dny +38

      Well they don't pay taxes they pass it off on the consumer of their product. Trying to over tax the wealthy has backfired tremendously.

    • @loquas9741
      @loquas9741 Před 25 dny +16

      What do you think happens when big companies drain the population of their money?
      Btw, this also applies for countries. That's why the US is so mad at Germany and China for having a trade surplus. Because the money is moving out of country to buy goods, but is not coming back at the same rate.

    • @Slick1020
      @Slick1020 Před 25 dny

      Why you worried about CEOs? Definitely a remark from a lame @$$ Gen Zer. You're just lazy and worry about your own pockets.

    • @templar1694
      @templar1694 Před 25 dny +7

      Should company executives' salary be scrutinized by the supreme court or any court before it is approved.

    • @MariE-bz2eq
      @MariE-bz2eq Před 25 dny +74

      Ceo wages used to be 5x higher than regular employees, nownits 800x

  • @ramys.4313
    @ramys.4313 Před 26 dny +2057

    Leaving America is the new American dream. People are desperate.

    • @usernoob337
      @usernoob337 Před 26 dny +156

      If it weren’t for the double taxation laws, lot of people would’ve left America by now , Us citizenship is a trap.

    • @graces1041
      @graces1041 Před 26 dny +172

      hate to break it to you but most of the world is worse off that the US. Canada and most of Europe have horrible wages in comparison and super high housing costs. Sure healthcare and social services like daycare are less but the US is overall much better off

    • @DragonKingGaav
      @DragonKingGaav Před 26 dny +56

      @@usernoob337 France has a tax treaty with the USA so you don't have to pay double!

    • @sew_gal7340
      @sew_gal7340 Před 26 dny +60

      @@graces1041 I think most of europe is great, and so are places like japan, singapore, and even china

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 Před 26 dny +14

      This just isn't at all accurate lol

  • @jamievaughn1485
    @jamievaughn1485 Před 21 dnem +161

    I make $102k, it’s $64k after taxes and insurance. Yet all govt programs use your gross income for everything even though they know that isn’t what you make. It’s insane.

    • @kelvint.h1158
      @kelvint.h1158 Před 9 dny +11

      1000000000%

    • @letzsnuggzz
      @letzsnuggzz Před 8 dny +1

      @@kelvint.h1158 Yes. Gross income is such a farce. People should stop quoting it. Net is the true number.

    • @bryanjohnson5803
      @bryanjohnson5803 Před 8 dny

      The people not working make almost $64k for doing nothing and get free medical/dental, housing, ebt, wica, etc...

    • @AlexMAGA2024
      @AlexMAGA2024 Před 4 dny

      Move to Thailand American dream is dead

    • @LaVidaLocaHomie
      @LaVidaLocaHomie Před 4 dny +2

      @@AlexMAGA2024 Thai dream is dead too. A big noodle dinner used to be 20 baht, now it's 100 baht.

  • @dawsondanny990
    @dawsondanny990 Před 19 dny +500

    The average person has never been so poor. Millions of families are struggling financially as living expenses hit the highest levels in more than four decades. Over 60% of our country lives paycheck to paycheck and about 40% earns poverty wages. Even after working all their lives, more than a quarter of older people have no savings and many believe they will never be able to retire in dignity, while around 55% of elderly people try to survive on an income of less than 25,000 a year.

    • @rannyorton
      @rannyorton Před 19 dny +3

      Biden is worst thing that happened to us

    • @belljoe
      @belljoe Před 19 dny +9

      TRUMP 2024

    • @smithlenn
      @smithlenn Před 19 dny +1

      Given the prevailing market conditions and the potential risks associated with the current economy, I would recommend refraining from investing in stocks for now. Instead, it would be prudent to consider retaining a portion of your assets in gold. Alternatively, seeking advice from a financial advisor could provide valuable guidance in this matter.

    • @rannyorton
      @rannyorton Před 19 dny +2

      Fantastic! Can you share more details?

    • @smithlenn
      @smithlenn Před 19 dny +2

      was guided tho..Julia Hope Marble. walked me through the ropes majestically i'ts my ultimate pleasure.

  • @tigerlee9613
    @tigerlee9613 Před 23 dny +440

    In 2007, it cost $680 to rent a 1 bedroom. Now it's $2300/month!

    • @TaureanRuler
      @TaureanRuler Před 21 dnem +27

      One could get a one bedroom in Las Vegas for $499 a month. That’s was the cost of my first place in 2016 and in less than ten years it’s now 1400 a month for a one bedroom in some areas.

    • @trueelectsupremea.m.mosttr4786
      @trueelectsupremea.m.mosttr4786 Před 21 dnem +4

      An ounce of gold was roughly the same price in 2007 as that bedroom. An ounce of gold is roughly the same price in 2024 as the $2,300 month rent. So where did it go up?
      It's the same price.
      Pound of feathers or pound of bricks.
      How's it more expensive?

    • @tigerlee9613
      @tigerlee9613 Před 21 dnem +8

      @trueelectsupremea.m.mosttr4786 Minimum wage was roughly $9/hour in 2007. Minimum wage is $15/hour now where I'm located. Wages are not keeping up with the cost of living. Rent has more than tripled for a 1 bedroom compared to the doubling of minimum wages up to now from 2007. That's what went wrong.
      Investments such as gold does move with inflation, but most people without financial literacy knew about that then, when they were to busy enjoying life with the money they earned without investing.

    • @trueelectsupremea.m.mosttr4786
      @trueelectsupremea.m.mosttr4786 Před 21 dnem +1

      @@tigerlee9613
      Why are you working for minimum wage?
      Advance yourself. Only people with poor lifestyle choices or mental illness work those if not the elderly or youth.
      You don't make a career out of minimum wage 😂

    • @tigerlee9613
      @tigerlee9613 Před 21 dnem

      @trueelectsupremea.m.mosttr4786 😆What the heck are you talking about lol? I'm advocating for the little people who are struggling. I'm already a multi-millionaire who owns multiple properties. Even my personal page shows a video of my 1 bedroom penthouse investment condo I tried to sell online over 10 years ago but couldn't, and held onto it. It's worth over half a million dollars now, and the mortgage is paid off.
      I'm more concerned about the little people who are disadvantaged physically, mentally or don't have the opportunities I had.

  • @tonyazzaro9593
    @tonyazzaro9593 Před 26 dny +2452

    Put it this way, back in 2005, 48k was worth what 75k is today 😭😭😭

    • @darkwoodmovies
      @darkwoodmovies Před 26 dny +207

      Except housing and rent is at least 3-4x higher. Inflation is a bad metric bc it doesn't take into account the fact that some things are bigger chunks of your budget, and the price of those big things increases way faster than inflation.

    • @SouthernIg
      @SouthernIg Před 26 dny +30

      This is f-in insane...

    • @tonyazzaro9593
      @tonyazzaro9593 Před 26 dny +8

      @@darkwoodmovies
      It's still all bad...

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Před 26 dny +10

      @@darkwoodmovies Inflation is sort hand for the entire economy.

    • @TRAVIESO_NA
      @TRAVIESO_NA Před 26 dny +15

      I was reading this report that said it was even worse in 2005 5$ is now 9$ so it’s like almost 50 percent deflated. Or in other words what you bought in 2005 for 5$ is now $9 dollars 💵 😢

  • @meaganelli943
    @meaganelli943 Před 22 dny +109

    I make 16.50 an hour at a factory. I rent a small trailer to rent in a safe neighborhood for 750. I can afford groceries every week and have nice thrift stores nearby. I have an old Honda CRV with high miles but reliable and a river nearby to swim. And the library is close by. Life is simple. I am not expecting to buy a house, but maybe with a group of people I can. Im educated and want to create some kind of thing but going much slower and learning to be content with much less. Once you die to the American Dream and realize its just not going to happen it's not so bad. New goal is trying hard to not spend money and be pressured by consumerism. Still difficult not to do splurge. A fight against our materialistic culture.

    • @HabitualJoker
      @HabitualJoker Před 22 dny +11

      You seem to have a great outlook on things. I’m trying my best to spend less on things that I really do not need. I recently picked up a library card in an effort to stop buying books that are just going to take up space around my house. If there is something that I really want, I am holding myself to selling off things I already have in order to buy the thing that I want. It makes you really consider the things you want vs. the things that you need.

    • @SecretSquirrel-gp7kz
      @SecretSquirrel-gp7kz Před 21 dnem +13

      The consumerism is the killer. I live frugal and use my library. Drive an 14 yo car, keep my cell til it dies and use Ting mobile. I buy exclusively at thrift shops. Maybe get a pizza and eat out at a diner 1x month? Always leaving the house w a water bottle, coffee and a snack is important. Consolidate errands, shop at aldis. Make plant cuttings and get dollar store pots and give them as gifts. It is very against mainstream but i do what i have to do to live below my means. Healthcare is our biggest expense with dental and specialist fees.

    • @rh10033
      @rh10033 Před 21 dnem +14

      People spend too much money. That's a huge part of the problem. Get a solid, older home that's cosmetically outdated. By a used vehicle. Stop eating out and don't buy the latest iPhone. Stop thinking about vacations and save for retirement instead. Priorities, for real. My 20 year old brother and 19 year old sister in law are able to make it without college degrees. Pretty sure most can, even if you have to move. We do live in Pittsburgh though where the cost of living is lower than most, but our wages aren't as high.
      My husband doesn't have a college degree and makes more than I could WITH my bachelor's degree. So there's that...

    • @trueelectsupremea.m.mosttr4786
      @trueelectsupremea.m.mosttr4786 Před 21 dnem +8

      The American dream was to own a house and car. That was it.
      That's simple enough.

    • @FelipeValdez-og2tg
      @FelipeValdez-og2tg Před 20 dny +1

      @@rh10033 Amen Amen Amen !!!! 👌🏻

  • @TylerofSc004
    @TylerofSc004 Před 21 dnem +550

    If my wife and i never invest another dollar, we will have 1.9 million at retirement. This is why people say to do everything in your power (Legally and morally) to get $100k+ invested in your 20s.

    • @thelooseseal
      @thelooseseal Před 21 dnem +4

      What advice would you give to someone new to investing with around $200k to begin with?

    • @TylerofSc004
      @TylerofSc004 Před 21 dnem +6

      Investors should start with ETFs for a solid foundation, then diversify across asset classes and maintain disciplined, regular investing to minimize risks and maximize growth.

    • @Wendytsang12
      @Wendytsang12 Před 21 dnem +4

      You don't need to find the next Apple to succeed in investing. Just choose top-notch ETFs and partner with a financial advisor like I did. I turned $20k into $10k in annual dividends-a significant milestone for me today.

    • @greekbarrios
      @greekbarrios Před 21 dnem

      I've been considering getting one, but haven't been proactive about it. Can you recommend your advisor? I could really use some assistance.

    • @Wendytsang12
      @Wendytsang12 Před 21 dnem +4

      She goes by ‘Jill Marie Carroll’ I suggest you look her up. To be honest, I almost didn't buy the idea of letting someone handle growing my finance, but so glad I did.

  • @sstrick500
    @sstrick500 Před 23 dny +408

    I'm 50, and could retire now and live comfortably for the rest of my life; if I die next Tuesday.

  • @etep878
    @etep878 Před 25 dny +851

    Ordinary Americans are suffering but mega corporations appear to be profiting more than ever.
    Something isn't right here....

    • @vikker8274
      @vikker8274 Před 24 dny +8

      Yet half of us households have a zero or even a negative federal tax rate. Yes, they may pay state/local. But not federal like their neighbors have to.

    • @MattAllison-bz3rc
      @MattAllison-bz3rc Před 24 dny

      Corporations buy politicians that then give them our tax dollars for them to buy your dream out from under you. Or we’re having to compete against Criminal aliens for housing and food.

    • @mrscassandrasolano
      @mrscassandrasolano Před 24 dny +21

      A man literally set himself in fire today in DC trying to bring awareness of this

    • @Foomanlol
      @Foomanlol Před 24 dny

      @@mrscassandrasolano Sounds like someone who is just mentally ill.

    • @mansmind_
      @mansmind_ Před 24 dny +45

      Your government is printing 190 billion each year, increasing the price of everything, this isn’t right neither.

  • @user-eu4kt1vu8g
    @user-eu4kt1vu8g Před 21 dnem +48

    Before 1982, companies were not allowed to buy their stock back. The law was changed and CEO compensation shot through the roof. In the 1960's, businesses would not lay-off workers unless the company was bleeding lots of red-ink. Now, companies lay-off when they have record profits. The minimum wage use to be indexed to inflation, now it is not. In 1968 when minimum wage was at its greatest purchasing power, CEO's made about 40 times a minimum wage worker, today, it is around 600 times a minimum wage worker.

  • @DeannaMurray-zv
    @DeannaMurray-zv Před 19 dny +698

    My spouse and I are adding a variety of stocks/ETF to my present holdings for the long term, We've set aside $250k to start following inflation-indexed bonds and stocks of companies with solid cash flows, I believe it is a good time to capitalize on the market for long-term gains, but it wouldn't hurt to know means of actualizing short term profit.

    • @Erickruiz562
      @Erickruiz562 Před 19 dny

      For the average citizen, the tactics are rather demanding. In actuality, most of them are effectively completed by experts who possess the necessary knowledge and skill set to carry out such occupations.

    • @JimmyA.Alvarez
      @JimmyA.Alvarez Před 19 dny

      The uncertainties accompanying this present market is more reasons I have my daily investment decisions guided by a portfolio-coach seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time, both employing profit-oriented strategy and laying off risk as a hedge against the inevitable downtrends, coupled with the exclusive analysis, it's quite impossible not to outperform. Netted over $550k in return on investment, since using a coach for about 2years.

    • @JimmyA.Alvarez
      @JimmyA.Alvarez Před 19 dny

      It comes down to technique; a downtrend gives you room to focus on the market and grow significantly in the short or long term. While it is easier to make money when the market is rising, a downtrend can still yield high returns if you have the necessary knowledge and skills. For this reason, I have been scaling up during this difficult period by working with an investment advisor; this has been the only way I have raised up to $150K in the last six months.

    • @JanineJ.Cromwell
      @JanineJ.Cromwell Před 19 dny

      I've wanted to start investing for a few months, but just haven't had the courage to start because the market has been down for most of last year. Please how can I reach out to your financial advisor and what are their services like?

    • @JimmyA.Alvarez
      @JimmyA.Alvarez Před 19 dny +2

      One of the fiduciaries I deal with is Jennifer Lea Jenson. Just check the name. There would be a letter with the necessary information to set up an appointment.

  • @ShutterSpeedGaming
    @ShutterSpeedGaming Před 26 dny +1429

    I purchased my home in Woodstock GA for 92k in 2015 for a 2bed 2bath. I pay $565 for my mortgage. I realize how blessed I am to have it in today’s economy.

    • @27TheJose
      @27TheJose Před 26 dny +47

      It’s probably worth like 150k now

    • @Imback1214
      @Imback1214 Před 26 dny +39

      Woodstock now is being crazy to buy and rent is just awful lol

    • @Karuska22ps
      @Karuska22ps Před 26 dny +23

      Boomer

    • @ihearditinadream
      @ihearditinadream Před 26 dny +65

      ​@Karuska22ps Boomer is 2015 is actually, probably the dumbest thing I've ever heard.

    • @underground9260
      @underground9260 Před 26 dny +50

      @@27TheJoseprobably like 300K now. Woodstock is not cheap like it was a decade abo

  • @skylerk55
    @skylerk55 Před 26 dny +146

    I made 80k before covid. Had about 1700 left over each month. Today I make 110k. I have about 600$ left each month while living a less luxurious lifestyle

    • @LeoMidori
      @LeoMidori Před 24 dny

      We're being hosed. It's outrageous how much things have spiked, and it's entirely the fault of the people at the very, very top. This is all greed for lavish, wasteful lifestyles of the already hyper wealthy elite.

    • @user-ye6ty9ie8g
      @user-ye6ty9ie8g Před 24 dny +15

      all according to plan...

    • @07ikkin
      @07ikkin Před 22 dny +5

      Then you are still doing well; better than most of us

    • @justinmaxwell86
      @justinmaxwell86 Před 22 dny

      You can thank the Biden inflation tax.

    • @TimmyNigfartish
      @TimmyNigfartish Před 21 dnem +1

      Skill issue, you clearly not doing something right.

  • @RedTideRTS
    @RedTideRTS Před 21 dnem +49

    Engineer here, just made it to the $100k/yr club a year and a half ago…. Wife, four kids, and paycheck to paycheck…
    Glad I made the move to make more money. But it feels like chasing the wind. I’m barely settled into this job and I’m already looking forward to where I can move up next to make more so we can at least stay with the curve.
    Wife is a stay-at-home mom and every job she’s qualified for would require me making schedule sacrifices at my job that would affect my value and our availability and relationship to our kids.
    Feels abysmal. And I feel for our floor level plant workers who must be under even more stress.

    • @TimmyNigfartish
      @TimmyNigfartish Před 21 dnem +1

      What is your wife making ? she can't be sitting around the house and just spreading her legs. She must also work.

    • @write2nick
      @write2nick Před 19 dny +3

      Your wife need to work. Double income is so much better.

    • @RedTideRTS
      @RedTideRTS Před 19 dny +9

      @@write2nick unfortunately, having two spouses working isn’t feasible for everyone. Easy to say, difficult to implement in the various realities we all exist in.

    • @srizashaha5765
      @srizashaha5765 Před 16 dny

      @@RedTideRTS it's your terrible family planning and financial mismanagement that brought you here. why have FOUR CHILDREN and a stay at home wife who generates 0 dollar per month if you can't afford to provide for them? if you had 1 or 2 kids and and a working wife who makes atleast 40k per annum then your life would have been much better. next time make your decisions wisely

    • @loveydovey4u
      @loveydovey4u Před 16 dny +3

      4 kids!? That will cost you....

  • @judah400yrs2
    @judah400yrs2 Před 21 dnem +18

    In 1976 my parents bought a house for $36,000 the monthly mortgage payment was $ 310 dollars a month quarter acre lot, 3 br 1 1/2 ba living room, dining room backyard and 2 car garage. Me my brother and sister attended private schools and my mother was a stay at home mom. My mother would eventually get a part time job when we all started High School. Life was great!

  • @mohamethseck
    @mohamethseck Před 26 dny +364

    I need to get out this rat race. Money is great, but I can't keep chasing it all my life. I'm just gonna forget the "American Dream" and focus on my dream. I don't need much nor am I asking for a lot. I gotta figure out how to do more with less

    • @ShutterSpeedGaming
      @ShutterSpeedGaming Před 26 dny +2

      Join the AirForce 😊

    • @Raw.milk1
      @Raw.milk1 Před 26 dny +19

      @@ShutterSpeedGamingbut I have to shave my beard and look like a worm :(

    • @gregallen1381
      @gregallen1381 Před 26 dny +2

      @@ShutterSpeedGaming thinking about dropping out of my ivy league business school to become a pilot for the air force

    • @shaymalchione809
      @shaymalchione809 Před 26 dny +13

      That’s the trick to figure out I’m pretty poor only make $40k but I live comfortably & have a savings. But I live in low income housing which helps a lot. If I had to move I wouldn’t even be able to afford a one bedroom apartment in my area.

    • @ShutterSpeedGaming
      @ShutterSpeedGaming Před 26 dny +1

      @@gregallen1381 you’d make a great pilot 👨‍✈️

  • @LChiuy
    @LChiuy Před 26 dny +440

    Based in California, I make $100k, but it's not really $100k. After state, federal, health insurance, plus other mandatory taxes, you're looking at about $65k - 70k take home. Now, every product you buy, there is sale tax, which is about 10% in my area, which further brings down your buying power to $58.5k - 63k. You got rent, which the average rent is $2,340. Now you're down to $30k - 35k. And now you have to factor in the higher cost of living such as food, car payment, utility, etc.

    • @Brayant25
      @Brayant25 Před 26 dny +47

      Move away from California. I live in North Dakota and make $125000 after taxes my take home is $90000. Rent, food, and mostly everything is cheaper. I bought a new 2023 SUV and paid $39000 cash and have $150000 in my bank account. I can take a vacation anytime to California and any expensive state and spoil myself and my family easily.

    • @mr.kilpatrick2991
      @mr.kilpatrick2991 Před 26 dny +3

      @@Brayant25 thats an extreme change in climate - how have you handled that? I mean going from Cali weather to SD weather sub zero is pretty extreme. Has that been hard to deal with?

    • @LChiuy
      @LChiuy Před 26 dny +68

      @@Brayant25 That's easier said than done. Most of us have established lives here which is the main reason why we don't want to leave. It's not that easy to just pack your things and go when I have an established career and a social life group here. If I didn't have anything to lose or want to restart, then yes.

    • @sheridancole3821
      @sheridancole3821 Před 26 dny +79

      @@LChiuy As a Brit, I find the salaries in the US insane. $100,000 in 95% of the world would mean you are in the 1% of earners. The fact people earning those numbers are struggling to afford homes is sad and illustrates how broken the system is.

    • @Brayant25
      @Brayant25 Před 26 dny +20

      @mr.kilpatrick2991 The funny thing is I'm an immigrant from Nigeria who moved to the USA in 2010 and now a citizen. I landed and lived in Atlanta until 2015 when I packed up my life and moved to North Dakota without knowing anyone and no family here. I started afresh.

  • @berryfairy68
    @berryfairy68 Před 21 dnem +25

    There is no American dream anymore. I hear young people saying, there's no point in wanting a house or anything anymore. So sad. Many people don't even make 50k a year. If we all stood up and demanded what we need, instead of fighting for ridiculous causes maybe we could make a difference.

    • @aafx3083
      @aafx3083 Před 4 dny

      Yeah looking at my situation I can’t even afford rent. I’m just gonna enjoy the things that I can have.

    • @Billdean25
      @Billdean25 Před 3 dny

      Stop it with these useless wars

    • @tmusa2002
      @tmusa2002 Před 2 dny

      Every millennial I know owns a home and car nicer than mine. Surround yourself with successful peers; it’s contagious. Sounds crazy but it works.

  • @NikD215
    @NikD215 Před 22 dny +21

    I make $55 a year, I recently got a promotion, it was forced on me and it’s what’s called a dry promotion in other words more responsibilities with the same pay, so no raise. My rent has gone up $400 a month in 3 years, my car insurance went up $40 a month, my cellphone bill went $40 a month, I still have student loans, I just paid $80 for an oil change, a fixer upper in my area is between $200-250k, I drive DoorDash, Uber Eats and Instacart just to cover bills, saving $100 a month is a huge achievement. I’m working most of my life away just to tread water. America is a first world third country. We don’t even have basic healthcare. Oh I have healthcare, but I don’t go to the doctors because of the high deductible of my health insurance, so I pay for health insurance I’m too broke to use.

    • @noseraph
      @noseraph Před 18 dny

      $80 is a lot for an oil change. What do you drive?

    • @joshuameyer9309
      @joshuameyer9309 Před 12 dny

      Word up

    • @uclassc
      @uclassc Před 11 dny

      So true about healthcare and in cali it’s against the law not to have health ins so you end up paying over $600 for literally nothing

  • @DolphinWithIgloo-fg3ow
    @DolphinWithIgloo-fg3ow Před 26 dny +1150

    Keep the car longer, keep the phone longer. Being in a mutually supporting relationship also helps. "Strong and independent" is expensive.

    • @Jay-jb2vr
      @Jay-jb2vr Před 26 dny +71

      And "weak and dependent" is cheap..

    • @jaughnekow
      @jaughnekow Před 26 dny +74

      Heh..."supporting relationship"
      Who's willing to be with a struggling partner in the first place?

    • @UselessDBag
      @UselessDBag Před 26 dny

      Wow, not getting a new car and phone--great advice!
      Now what can you tell me for student loans, despite an academic scholarship (tution doubled in 4yrs) for an ME in mechanical at a public university, only to meet 60 hrs/wk for a $70k salary.
      Let me guess, less avocado toast right?

    • @stocksxbondage
      @stocksxbondage Před 26 dny +114

      @@jaughnekowdon’t stop believing. My wife met me when I had no job and was living with my parents. Now I’m the breadwinner. Couldn’t have done it without her

    • @lefotografion
      @lefotografion Před 26 dny +50

      I speak from experience: this is wrong. Being single is waaay cheaper then having lots of friends or being in an happy relationship

  • @barrettbritt
    @barrettbritt Před 26 dny +495

    I can't believe I'm only 21 years old and can already tell "inflation stories." Like how your grandpa would say "When I was your age, a coke and a cheeseburger at McDonald's was 15 cents." I can say that just looking back to prices in high school. Got my first car and I'd go to Bojangles after football practice some days, and got the same thing every day: 4-piece supremes dinner. It was always $6.50 flat. Now, its over $11. I just don't understand :(

    • @vulpixelful
      @vulpixelful Před 26 dny +62

      I'm in my 30s. As a teenager in the midwest, I distinctly remember walking to Wendy's with just a five dollar bill and leaving with the Wendy's Single meal. Not just the burger and fries, the _meal_ with the drink included

    • @eddyr1041
      @eddyr1041 Před 26 dny +6

      Hopefully the price shouldnt hold...
      Or maybe people dont eat fast food anymore... with so many tools and cooking video ... time for healthy meals?😊

    • @republicunited2183
      @republicunited2183 Před 26 dny +24

      Trump 2024!

    • @user-vx7vi3vq1c
      @user-vx7vi3vq1c Před 26 dny +3

      Don’t eat McDonald’s.

    • @realbigtuna667
      @realbigtuna667 Před 26 dny

      Learn what happens when the government prints money at a faster rate than the productive output of the economy. In short, it's effectively a backdoor tax on everyone via devaluation of the currency.

  • @FredMeyer-no3ji
    @FredMeyer-no3ji Před 16 dny +114

    Your videos were great!! I'm one of your viewers and have been watching your videos lately. I would like to invest, but I still can't find the right investment to commit to. I will appreciate any help here.

    • @workjax
      @workjax Před 16 dny

      I always wanted to trade crypto for a long time but the volatility in the price has been very confusing to me although I have watched many CZcams videos about it but still find it difficult to understand.

    • @SavAge-rn4rb
      @SavAge-rn4rb Před 16 dny

      It makes sense that BTC and crypto are of helping to regulate, rather than pretend it won't ever happen.
      The big institutions getting In is the catalyst that will laugh us made they grow used to it becomes a nonissue usually because of their fears never materialize.
      And benefits they were unaware of before turn out to be more beneficial

    • @AugustinaOtito
      @AugustinaOtito Před 16 dny

      Trading is easy, but trading the right coin without a time-tested strategy is incredibly hard.

    • @DesTiny-jh4cn
      @DesTiny-jh4cn Před 16 dny

      My advice, never do shorts or longs on stocks or #crypto
      most people went bankrupt better buying in parts monthly

    • @DavidWhite-dc3zw
      @DavidWhite-dc3zw Před 16 dny

      I've been in touch with a financial advisor ever since I got into the market. Knowing today's culture The challenge is knowing when to purchase or sell when investing in trending Crypto, which is pretty simple. On my portfolio, which has grown over overboard and been making about $1 500 bi-weekly, What I'm trying to say is the 5% of traders in the world that are consistently profitable are very reserved, they are just random/lowkey people no one even expects. My account manager chooses entry and exit orders

  • @thatonedude3461
    @thatonedude3461 Před 19 dny +28

    My wife and I bought our first home in December. Unfortunately its a freaking townhome with no front or back yard. We paid $360k because single family homes were to far out of our reach. Houses in our area START at $400k. Meaning youre paying $400k for a complete dump!! So we had no choice but to buy a townhome. And our monthly mortgage is $2300....absolutely ridiculous!!....FJB

    • @msdanielle430
      @msdanielle430 Před 7 dny

      Townhomes in my area inLA start at about $600k. My friends bought a townhome a few years ago in San Diego and now it's about $850k and they're stuck because they can't sell. They'd spend almost $1m for something probably the same size 😕

    • @jefferyisenblatter1404
      @jefferyisenblatter1404 Před 4 dny

      Sure it's all Biden's fault. I can hardly wait for Trump to get re-elected and give another tax cut to the wealthy and corporations. While he's at it, he can throw huge tariffs on imported goods and spiral inflation out of control. It'll be great.

  • @FelipeValdez-og2tg
    @FelipeValdez-og2tg Před 26 dny +1034

    Visiting a third world country makes you realize that in the U.S we have a materialism epidemic.

    • @redwhite_040
      @redwhite_040 Před 26 dny +116

      buy less, save money. Here it is.

    • @FelipeValdez-og2tg
      @FelipeValdez-og2tg Před 26 dny +30

      @@redwhite_040 so simple, yet so difficult

    • @guachafo
      @guachafo Před 26 dny +61

      My sister now lives in the US and yeah, people buy A LOT of things and pay higher prices when there are cheaper models that do the same thing

    • @emmatessier600
      @emmatessier600 Před 26 dny +71

      A bare bones budget would do wonders for so many, but most prefer to live in denial and comfort.

    • @chessplayer25
      @chessplayer25 Před 26 dny +53

      Consumerism. Buy buy buy!!! 💳 Propaganda everywhere, commercials, ahhh!!! 😅

  • @hourbee5535
    @hourbee5535 Před 26 dny +1077

    To all the young folks: keep your debt level low.

    • @erichsbloodaxe
      @erichsbloodaxe Před 26 dny +115

      Folks would love to, but when you're having to buy your groceries on credit so as not to starve, it gets a bit tough.

    • @ajh.4131
      @ajh.4131 Před 26 dny +75

      @@erichsbloodaxethere’s other options before resulting to credit. That’s the problem with this country. People use credit/debt as the FIRST & ONLY option.

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Před 26 dny +24

      Even better, just live off of bread and water.

    • @necromancer2367
      @necromancer2367 Před 26 dny +109

      ​@@ajh.4131i love how peeps like ya say these things but never give actual solutions.

    • @Wahinies
      @Wahinies Před 26 dny +51

      Lemme just double my income real quick brb

  • @DarkOrbit1229
    @DarkOrbit1229 Před 22 dny +13

    I’m a truck driver and my wife is an LPN in Kentucky. She’s in school for her RN, and even when she gets that, affording a cookie cutter home here (3B/2B) , even in the sticks is next to impossible without help from our parents. Even with 20% down the 7-10% interest rate really eats up the rest of the monthly budget.

  • @2r3alhudson3
    @2r3alhudson3 Před 25 dny +69

    I’m tired of working all the time😢 it’s not worth it when your scared to spend your own money 🙄😤

    • @christiandauz3742
      @christiandauz3742 Před 23 dny

      Why not hack Putin and steal his money

    • @p.gizzle90
      @p.gizzle90 Před 18 dny

      The main reason why I’m taking a day off tmrw. I’m exhausted. And need rest that 2days is not giving. Been a while since I’ve had a vacation.

  • @MoisesAlmeida
    @MoisesAlmeida Před 24 dny +160

    I live in São Paulo, Brazil and it's impressive how this report seems to be completely talking about our reality here. São Paulo is a great city to live, but the perspectives are identical, it seems that the USA is becoming underdeveloped too.

    • @Chinese-qq3ep
      @Chinese-qq3ep Před 24 dny +7

      You can't compare São Paulo with the rest of the country. Even going to another capital like Recife or Belo Horizonte is much more affordable than São Paulo.

    • @bayupran
      @bayupran Před 24 dny +9

      I would still choose to live in underdeveloped USA over Brazil though.

    • @randomuser529
      @randomuser529 Před 23 dny

      Same for Europe. They doubled the supply of euros/dollars in circulation during the fake pandemic. All fiat currencies hyperinflate to zero eventually. Buy bitcoin.

    • @jon8107
      @jon8107 Před 23 dny

      No people here have mentalities that they deserve everything but require no working. They want to have a lifestyle of 9-5 and push papers. Nobody wants to do service work or labor. Lineman here make over 100k just gotta work up to it. Start at 18-20. Be there by 27-30. No student loan debt. People here believe that work is “below” them. Viola here we are.

    • @kokeskokeskokes
      @kokeskokeskokes Před 22 dny

      @@bayupran Still.

  • @spencercamp4558
    @spencercamp4558 Před 22 dny +8

    Too many people, too little construction, too few nice neighborhoods with good schools, too many airbnbs & corporate land holding LLC, etc. Our parents and grandparents didn’t have to face this much market pressure on both the supply and demand of the housing market.

  • @joshtainter6852
    @joshtainter6852 Před 21 dnem +6

    The government has completely screwed us. And we just sit by and let it happen, shameful.

  • @IamDrDee
    @IamDrDee Před 26 dny +488

    It's called the American Dream because you have to be asleep to believe it.

    • @nikolajovicic174
      @nikolajovicic174 Před 26 dny +52

      At least you should quote the guy who said it. "George Carlin" .. Otherwise, someone may think you are smart enough

    • @sebastianbroncano7405
      @sebastianbroncano7405 Před 26 dny +7

      The American dream is still alive and well. People just don’t know how to achieve it.

    • @Jay-jb2vr
      @Jay-jb2vr Před 26 dny +2

      ​@@nikolajovicic174 of course this comment would have popped up

    • @IP0Monsturd
      @IP0Monsturd Před 26 dny +3

      I was looking for the quote by George Carlin. It didn’t take long to find it.

    • @dillonthatch4624
      @dillonthatch4624 Před 26 dny +5

      @@sebastianbroncano7405wrong

  • @SouthernIg
    @SouthernIg Před 26 dny +954

    Now 200k is the new 100k.

  • @misspatvandriverlady7555
    @misspatvandriverlady7555 Před 21 dnem +6

    My parents swallowed the “American dream” hook, line, and sinker. We lived like we were in poverty even though we were upper-middle class, aside from crazy “vacations” set up 100% by our father and the fact that basic needs were always met. They were unable to relax, enjoy themselves, have fun. Their marriage drifted apart; their kids completed bachelor’s degrees were didn’t want to, master’s degrees were did want to, then got jobs totally unrelated to either. I, at least, learned that saving for the future with no care for the present is just as destructive as blowing everything now and giving no care to the future. You might get to retirement age with a pile of money, if your health and marriage and spouse’s health and kids’ health and so on hold, but even if you do make it to that point, you’ll have lost the ability to enjoy spending money on ANYTHING. 😕

  • @MONi_LALA
    @MONi_LALA Před 11 dny +3

    My generation might not be able to afford a house, might not have social security by the time we retired, might not have children because they are too darn expensive, might still be drown in debts, might not have enough to feel happy about. So no question, we just going to YOLOing the whole way through.

  • @LethLL
    @LethLL Před 24 dny +121

    They really can’t get away from “omg Millenials are just wasting their money” can they. I spend about 50 dollars a month on subscription services, home cook every meal, we don’t vacation, we don’t go to movies, we don’t do anything. Yet it’s the miscellaneous bills that drown us. We were about to finish paying off a furnace repair bill next month and the. Got hit with a 1700 dollar auto repair bill. If nothing else happens we can pay that off in 3-4 months. That’s how tight things are. But typical boomer reporting can’t own that and has to make us look bad.

    • @UpYourArsenal
      @UpYourArsenal Před 23 dny +1

      Save more money and develop an emergency fund next time. You're leveraging 3-4 months of debt to pay for a necessary expense, you aren't *supposed* to succeed living like this. Change your habits, stop choosing to leverage debt for your living expenses.

    • @aolvaar8792
      @aolvaar8792 Před 23 dny +2

      In 1980, my first job out of college was $100K,
      overseas petroleum engineer, $250K in the late 90's
      The education was free, paid by an alumnus.
      In 2000, I took a government job, $60K
      20 years gets you a 40% pension and free lifetime family healthcare.

    • @MannysVisionStudio
      @MannysVisionStudio Před 23 dny +1

      Stop blaming “boomers” it’s not the problem at all. You are caring way too much what other people think.

    • @aolvaar8792
      @aolvaar8792 Před 23 dny

      @@MannysVisionStudio I'm a Boomer.
      2MM homes went to the "second" home market, 2% interest rates helped.
      When the Boomers start to die off, the largest transfer of wealth in US history,
      Real Estate!

    • @xlerb2286
      @xlerb2286 Před 23 dny +6

      I'm a boomer, I don't think millennials are wasting their money any more than we did, and maybe less. And I don't think avocado toast has anything to do with anything. I do think that _some_ millennials have unrealistic expectations (not at all saying you do). But I also know it's harder than it was 20 years ago and it's not getting easier. I can't speak to how you're spending your money, and it's not my business anyway. But from what you've said you're doing a better job than I was at your age. An adjusted for inflation $1700 car repair bill would have been $1000 for us, and we had that bill and it hit us hard too, it probably sat on the card for at least 3-4 months. But the thing is with time we could get ahead. A bit of money went into the 401k, a tiny bit went into savings for emergencies - it may get wiped out but that meant we still owed a bit less and could recover a bit sooner. And did we economize, we didn't spend a dime for dishes, furniture, etc. The 2nd chance store was too expensive. We scrounged from relatives, I wasn't above some dumpster diving or boulevard shopping come cleanup week. And in time we got ahead (we still shop at 2nd chance stores though). I'm not sure the younger generations can get ahead though.

  • @SaraNisha-fw4uk
    @SaraNisha-fw4uk Před 25 dny +174

    I really feel insecure about the world we live in right now, It's really sad how the American dream has become so unattainable for many. Even with a good income, people are struggling to make ends meet

    • @MichaelAlex-bt1pn
      @MichaelAlex-bt1pn Před 25 dny +7

      yes its everywhere, it's not just about earning a high salary anymore. The pressures of today leads to more spending, more debt, and less financial security

    • @MaxWell-pp9zs
      @MaxWell-pp9zs Před 25 dny

      Youre right, its shifted from just high salaries to smart financial management. focusing on what we control and seizing market opportunities, even in downturns can lead to substantial returns. Despite inflation challenges Ive seen returns of $800,000

    • @PeterParkar-nk6dw
      @PeterParkar-nk6dw Před 25 dny

      luck

    • @MaxWell-pp9zs
      @MaxWell-pp9zs Před 25 dny

      I'll give the credit to research, not luck. it led me to Emily ava milligan, one of the best fund managers. 300 grand to this, definitely not.

    • @nnnnnn3647
      @nnnnnn3647 Před 23 dny

      Socialism and the policy of destroying society with LYRI%6I++ perversions and drug addiction led to this.

  • @-.TS.-
    @-.TS.- Před 3 dny +4

    New hires start at $80k at my job. It was $32k when I started. Just shows how much the dollar has depreciated.

  • @gibranespinoza6603
    @gibranespinoza6603 Před 22 dny +5

    Tupac said it best: "They got money for wars but can't feed the poor."

  • @MarvishaN
    @MarvishaN Před 25 dny +1057

    Completely agree. The current state of the economy is unduly difficult for most people. 200k has become the new 100k. My biggest concern is life after retirement. Suddenly, I dont feel rich anymore with a $820k portfollo at 46. Its pathetic.

    • @debwes1
      @debwes1 Před 25 dny +16

      The government has let us down; just buy gold or bitcoin with it. Or hire/ work with a good market strategist. Theres still time for you

    • @georgeh.5126
      @georgeh.5126 Před 25 dny +3

      Many underestimate advisors until emotions lead to losses. My advisor crafted a tailored strategy aligning with my long-term goals, guiding entry and exit points for the equities I focus on. This has grown my portfolio to over $780k. My personal best so far

    • @josephbush
      @josephbush Před 25 dny +7

      Agreed! A lot of folks downplay the role of advisors until being burnt by their emotions, no offense. I remember some years back, during the covid-outbreak, I needed a good boost to stay afloat, hence researched for advisors and thankfully came across one with grit. As of today, my cash reserve has yielded from $350k to nearly $1m

    • @tommyers0
      @tommyers0 Před 25 dny +3

      @josephbush Please who guides you on the process of it all?

    • @tommyers0
      @tommyers0 Před 25 dny +2

      Thank you for sharing. it was easy to find her and schedule a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her résumé.

  • @darkwoodmovies
    @darkwoodmovies Před 26 dny +282

    In NYC, comfortable is literally around $300k now. Not only is it a moving target, it's moving so fast even the upper middle class can't keep up anymore. It's only rich or poor, nothing in between.

    • @sebastianbroncano7405
      @sebastianbroncano7405 Před 26 dny +15

      Lmao no. I’ve sold multiple homes to families who make less than 100k a year in nyc and they are all living comfortably and happy for several years now.

    • @darkwoodmovies
      @darkwoodmovies Před 26 dny

      @@sebastianbroncano7405 How many years? Because I looked at Zillow, and the only way you'll ever pay under like $4k a month is if you live in the slums 10 miles from a subway station. And literally not a single property in Manhattan for under $6k a month when you add up maintenance, taxes, and mortgage. Maybe there's some "affordable" housing units, but you have to be in an incredibly specific tax bracket for that.
      I guess co-ops? But those are still insane too, considering you technically still don't own it so it's barely a step above renting.

    • @oscard9429
      @oscard9429 Před 26 dny +17

      @@sebastianbroncano7405 They are probably in debt, but overall I'm on your side. 100k is more than enough to live anywhere except NYC

    • @mocheen4837
      @mocheen4837 Před 26 dny +17

      In California you need at least $300,000 to live the American Dream. To be comfortable maybe even $400,000. This means owning a nice home, nice cars, vacations, paying for college, saving for retirement and having an emergency fund.

    • @TimmyTheTinman
      @TimmyTheTinman Před 26 dny +14

      The only way to be comfortable in New York City is to leave unless you’re a millionaire that’s the only way you’re affording to live there.

  • @danr8787
    @danr8787 Před 21 dnem +4

    I’m making it on $75,000/year with a family of 4 with two disabled children. Wife is unable to work because of the children not being able to go to a normal daycare. We aren’t able to afford anything other than the bare essentials. They only way were able to stay afloat is buying my house when I was younger. I can’t rent a one bedroom apartment for what I pay for a mortgage payment. Same house I paid $75,000 for is now valued at $160,000. Can’t imagine people trying to make it with buying a house at today’s market price.

  • @yongliyu5171
    @yongliyu5171 Před 6 dny +3

    I'm from Asian Country, when I was a kid, my favorite dream is American lived by American Dream, and right now, I feel frightened and shocked when I heard and saw this news is extremely highest cost of living, If you mind me asking for this, I would to live my origin country and lived comfortable until retire. I feel dying for this

  • @chrisjonesfilm
    @chrisjonesfilm Před 26 dny +257

    "They call it the American Dream, because you have to be asleep to believe it."
    - George Carlin

  • @GothBatty
    @GothBatty Před 26 dny +123

    Spent 11 years to make it to $137k and now this inflation. It felt like $50k.

  • @buckeyedav1
    @buckeyedav1 Před 16 dny +2

    So thankful husband and I bought our tiny little house in our mid late 20's it wasn't in the best neighborhood but it wasn't much more to pay a mortgage versus renting at the time. We lived frugally and I still do now not by choice but because of the economy and I surround myself with others who are also like minded in frugality. It has meant sacrifices over the years no vacations, no going out to restaurants very often, our place of contentment was sitting on our front porch with our friends and neighbors. All I can advise to the younger generation is SAVE wherever you can. Even I think of some purchases I made over the years that were not wise choices like shopping at the Malls when I was younger. Best Wishes it's a tough rode for our younger generation. My home is paid for, my car is paid for and I have no debt and my house will be passed on to the younger generation Free. Anna In Ohio

  • @Dragonologist
    @Dragonologist Před 11 dny +3

    100k is more than enough for most of us. People are making poor spending habits and are too electrically and mechanically inept to resolve the majority of home and vehicle problems on their own without paying a premium.
    Buying brand new cars, or close to it, is a symptom of mechanical ineptitude. Renting is a symptom of mechanical, electrical and manual labor ineptitude. Everyone wants to be the guy behind the desk and are never learning how to be the guy with boots on the ground.
    We are spending so much on student loans to compete in job markets that don't need you while the trades are dwindling, which raises the cost for trade services and lowers the income of people in fields like teaching and administration.
    We only need so many teachers and we already have too many which is part of the reason why you have to take largely arbitrary general education courses.

  • @crazyone1067
    @crazyone1067 Před 26 dny +177

    I'm sitting here debt-free at 44 and count my blessings daily.

    • @gimcrack555
      @gimcrack555 Před 25 dny +15

      I been debt free since the age of 36. I'm now 60 and still debt free. It sure is a blessing for sure.

    • @marks2997
      @marks2997 Před 25 dny +9

      Life is easy when you live in a commune and have no partner, kids or pets :p

    • @Dohair879
      @Dohair879 Před 25 dny +1

      Same

    • @TriggaTreDay
      @TriggaTreDay Před 25 dny +8

      There are tones of people that are debt free and have terrible lives. It’s not about being debt free thats the biggest issue here, it’s about price gouging and inflation that’s making everything worst. Most of the people in my family are debt free and a lot of them are the ones that are struggling in life whereas the ones that have a little bit of debt are actually much better off and tend to get asked for help a lot. It’s all in how you manage your money, but none of that matters, if all of the damn prices keep going up and wages are not.

    • @MomoHitsujiOwO
      @MomoHitsujiOwO Před 25 dny +9

      Debt free at 30 and not planning to sign up for other debt that is not a mortgage. I’m so thankful 😌

  • @KaseyAtkins
    @KaseyAtkins Před 26 dny +422

    feeling very broke and depressed right now.

    • @romannavarro1178
      @romannavarro1178 Před 26 dny +39

      Trying find a job got me depressed keep getting ghosted

    • @MoralKombato
      @MoralKombato Před 26 dny

      L2 invest to hedge vs inflation nooblets

    • @aznosu
      @aznosu Před 26 dny

      at least 95% of Americans are with you lol... too bad even 99.9% of ppl can't believe they can change the unwanted future the 0.1% is forcing the human population to head to.... doomed to repeat the bloody past bc humans are easily manipulated to believe the worst ppl in position of power.

    • @Waltuh22232
      @Waltuh22232 Před 26 dny +4

      thats the point of media like this.

    • @Transbloop
      @Transbloop Před 26 dny +2

      Not like you'll do anything about it, but visit some stranger with an MD to give you pills from big pharma.

  • @danielbeaird6264
    @danielbeaird6264 Před 22 dny +2

    Meanwhile skilled tradesmen making just over that medicaid cutoff and we wonder why planes are dropping out of the sky... when an experienced aerospace tig welder making jet engine components lives the same lifestyle as a McDonald's employee... our plant manager at GE aerospace said after bragging about vacation homes and going to the super bowl every year was asked if there was going to be a cost of living increase he said "to be honest I think your job is really easy and your team is well compensated" I asked him "when your favorite quarterback makes that touchdown pass on game night does that look easy? Maybe it looks easy because you have a really good team" am I a Dr. ? No, but I guarantee you I spent the same amount of time developing my skill sets to be capable of passing these entry weld tests, and our compensation should reflect that... I don't care where or what a skilled tradesmen is doing... none of us should be making less than $45 - $60/hr

  • @BenvolioCapulet9
    @BenvolioCapulet9 Před 21 dnem +2

    Bought my house before it skyrocketed
    Bought my cars before values skyrocketed
    Now to learn carpentry and auto mechanic to keep both running and healthy

  • @ScareFestTTV
    @ScareFestTTV Před 26 dny +486

    And it's just getting worse everywhere.

    • @Yantrus
      @Yantrus Před 26 dny +27

      Feudalism here we come

    • @kurty128
      @kurty128 Před 26 dny +9

      @@Yantrus Fuedalism has been here for some time already.

    • @Jay-jb2vr
      @Jay-jb2vr Před 26 dny +3

      It's always been getting worse

    • @sebastianbroncano7405
      @sebastianbroncano7405 Před 26 dny +1

      Wow this is such a lie. I literally sold a home to a family of 3 a month ago making 50k a year with a 10% down payment in NYC

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Před 26 dny +3

      Lies again? I believe not in things that we can afford but rather how long we can keep them

  • @maddiie4737
    @maddiie4737 Před 25 dny +26

    as somebody who's living off of 40k (dual income household :D) i don't understand how you couldn't survive off of 100k.....that kind of money would change my life around and set me up for life

    • @13ikea
      @13ikea Před 23 dny +5

      Where do you live? Do you have college debt? Kids? A mortgage?

    • @Amber-rk6em
      @Amber-rk6em Před 11 dny +1

      It's all about location.

    • @tmusa2002
      @tmusa2002 Před 2 dny

      You must live in a depressed area. I’m in the Midwest and you’d have to try to make less than $35K/year. Maybe you both work part-time. McDonalds and Walmart pays $17/hour. You and your partner should make it a goal to get your combined income to $100k

  • @MTguy144
    @MTguy144 Před 8 dny +2

    Incorrect that now just a high school degree is not enough. I’m a general contractor and I can tell you that if a person graduates and spends 4 years in a trade they will be so much further ahead on average than their counterparts that went to college. They will leave college with $60-$80k in debt making $50-$70k a year where the ones that skipped college have no debt and are trained and making $100k 4 years in. There is so many field in trades that can be done for little to no school and pay well. I never went to college and I’m making $250-$300k a year and have a net worth over a mil. It’s about working hard and making good decisions, including living within your means.

  • @DOUGandNIKI
    @DOUGandNIKI Před 19 dny +4

    The cost of a college education is redicuous, it's a complete racket and unfair to people trying to do the right thing. The system is completely broken.

  • @marquesmurray
    @marquesmurray Před 23 dny +61

    Good thing about the internet there is always an anonymous random person who will tell you they make 8 dollars an hour and have 2 houses and 1 million in the bank and all they did was work hard and didnt spend money. Gotta love the internet.

    • @johnheath8882
      @johnheath8882 Před 14 dny

      We all start from somewhere at the bottom. The only ones who dont sacrifice their blood, sweat, and tears are those who already have money.

    • @sunshine69962
      @sunshine69962 Před 13 dny +3

      yup, its such a dumb reasoning. LiVe BeLoW YoUr MeAns, I already am, and I still cant save.

  • @joncarbone
    @joncarbone Před 26 dny +416

    Weird how these news companies never mention the real reason for the higher cost of living. Why is it our dollars are worth less and less each year?

    • @mexalcorta
      @mexalcorta Před 26 dny +86

      Because they are funded by such companies

    • @JP-qb3ny
      @JP-qb3ny Před 26 dny +126

      Trillions being printed each year. A lot of it going to foreign nations like Ukraine and Israel

    • @lycanwarrior2137
      @lycanwarrior2137 Před 26 dny +106

      You can thank the Federal Reserve and out-of-control government spending for devaluing our currency.

    • @daviddavis6876
      @daviddavis6876 Před 26 dny +28

      @@lycanwarrior2137 and the out of control spending is coupled with insane taxes.

    • @Leonnie13
      @Leonnie13 Před 26 dny

      Devaluing the dollar by over-printing… Over $30 trillion in national debt… falsely inflated housing markets… this isn’t about greedy companies raising prices out of the blue. It starts with the government. Inflation is how they tax you without openly raising your taxes.

  • @rileelake8096
    @rileelake8096 Před 13 dny +2

    The cost of living across the country have played a big part in the decision for my wife and I to not have children. Paying off student loans, saving money for retirement and buying a house are more important.

  • @LargeKhoiFish
    @LargeKhoiFish Před 26 dny +80

    The fact that vanlife is a trend amongst millennials and gen z shows a lot of us gave up on the home and would rather travel and live out of a car.

    • @charlesreimler962
      @charlesreimler962 Před 25 dny

      Lifestyle Work Vendors For Conventions Live In Vehicles Traveling

  • @chrisbluebird5037
    @chrisbluebird5037 Před 23 dny +345

    This is my fifth year after retirement. I’e been following the 4% rule thing I saw on a youTube channel, but this isn’t really how hard I expected things to be. After I cashed out a lump sum, I still have about $760k left, but at this rate, and with how the market is (we were putting money away in an index fund), I’m starting to get really worried.

    • @lucasanderson8993
      @lucasanderson8993 Před 23 dny +6

      Not a lot of people are able to save that much in a lifetime. But now you are retired and depend on your investment, it’s best you redistribute your capital. To simplify the process, you could allocate your resources with the help of a financial advisor.

    • @tommychestnut5335
      @tommychestnut5335 Před 23 dny +2

      I’m closing in on retirement, too, and I have benefitted so much from using a financial advisor. I didn’t start early, so I knew the compound interest of index fund investing would not work for me. Funny how I pulled in more profit than some of my peers who had been investing for many years.

    • @stevensmiddlemass2072
      @stevensmiddlemass2072 Před 23 dny

      I really need help, please. Can I ask who the financial advisor you work with is?

    • @stevensmiddlemass2072
      @stevensmiddlemass2072 Před 23 dny

      Thanks a lot for this. I'lll check her out right away.

    • @AOMVideoProductions
      @AOMVideoProductions Před 22 dny +2

      have you considered living outside the US? There are plenty of countries where you money will go further :)

  • @dixonbuttes6564
    @dixonbuttes6564 Před 21 dnem +1

    Americans are also moving in mass from places with affordable and abundant housing to places with unaffordable and scarce housing. Colorado’s house prices have tripled in ten years, meanwhile you can buy a nice house on a half acre in Iowa for under $150k … the crisis is an identity crisis. Exploding populations in previously undeveloped spaces is driving the perception of a scaled affordability crisis.

  • @TheBruceKeller
    @TheBruceKeller Před 21 dnem +2

    There's basically the people that owned before 2020 / QE5 and those that didn't. If someone had a $200k home they got in 2018, they'd be paying less than rent for a 1 bedroom now in my area and if someone wanted to buy the house they'd be looking at not only 4%+, but double the price tag, so their monthly mortgage payment would be more than double that of the 2018 buyer or even an early 2020 buyer.

  • @sagatuppercut2960
    @sagatuppercut2960 Před 24 dny +48

    I grew up in Los Angeles, and there was no way in hell I would be able to afford a house with a minimum wage salary. When I turned 18, I used to load boxes onto trucks for $3.35 an hour. I did that for 8 hours. After taxes, I was making about $20 a day.
    $20 x 5 days = $100 a week. $100 x 52 weeks = $5200. That was my NET salary (after federal, state, payroll taxes) in California during the 1980s. There was no way I could finance a house in a nice neighborhood (like Pasadena) or even a ghetto ass neighborhood. I would need about $24,000 to make a down payment on a $200,000 house in those days. Even if I lived with my parents and never spend a dime of my net income, it would take me about 4.5 years to get that down payment. But, alas, that $200,000 house that I wanted to finance turned into a $300,000 house in 1991! I would have to make about $30,000 a year, live in a cheap apartment, and be frugal as hell to save up for a down payment for a 2 bedroom "starter home" in a nice neighborhood in Los Angeles County during the 1990s. I've had various jobs since those days, and I never made enough money to save up for a house. Now it's 2024 and the dream of owning a nice house is just a nightmare to think about. My childhood home in Los Angeles is worth about $800,000 today. My parents bought it for about $18,000. I can't have the American dream and live a middle class lifestyle---like my parents did----with my modest annual salary ($38,000). I feel pathetic every day, and I wish I would've invested my money more in the past. I am doing that now with my small investment account. I also have a pension that I contributed to. Maybe Americans would have more money for housing if federal/state governments wouldn't TAX them so much!!! A single man or woman (no dependents) living in Los Angeles, California and making $100,000 a year will be taxed $28,022!

    • @eliot5220
      @eliot5220 Před 24 dny +6

      That story is telling about the greed in this country. There’s no way a house for 18,000 should go to $800,000. You could build that house for about 150,000$. That’s the problem with CA. None of the property is worth that.

    • @NTJedi
      @NTJedi Před 24 dny +3

      The birth lottery has always mattered since the earliest civilizations. This means if parents are not providing a stable source of income which can be inherited then those parents were not caring enough about their children OR the parents were tricked
      obbed from clever thieves. Across history few parents have been tricked
      obbed from clever thieves. When children inherit a stable source of income then this should only increase in strength and stability for future offspring otherwise those children made mistakes.

    • @user-eu4kt1vu8g
      @user-eu4kt1vu8g Před 24 dny +4

      I think the only way to save and live in LA on Minimum wage is by living out of a van. Otherwise, you donate whatever life savings you have to your landlord's retirement fund.

    • @isabelbecerra9258
      @isabelbecerra9258 Před 22 dny +1

      We left California in 2010. The glass ceiling is very real for women and latinX

    • @ZovaBe
      @ZovaBe Před 22 dny +4

      And if only they taught us financial literacy instead of the mitochondria being the powerhouse of the cell

  • @MariE-bz2eq
    @MariE-bz2eq Před 26 dny +188

    What sucks is that only 17% of people make over $100k

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Před 26 dny +7

      Tell me about it...
      The bar keeps getting set higher. Because the "investors" are hoping that some rich guy will pay for it.
      While there's nothing set aside for Working Class people.

    • @peacelove7437
      @peacelove7437 Před 26 dny +1

      I think it’s more. Everyone one I know make more than that; a sheriff, a nurse, manager at a dealership for their online department, a doctor, an interior designer in sales for a leather company, a traveling nurse.

    • @michaelc1063
      @michaelc1063 Před 26 dny +2

      Lies! Over 30% do

    • @shizuokaBLUES
      @shizuokaBLUES Před 25 dny +1

      That few!? That seems pretty abysmal if so. I would have guessed 25% or a little more !!

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Před 25 dny +6

      Exactly. And those guys already have housing.

  • @ajlocs2361
    @ajlocs2361 Před 20 dny +1

    Absolutely I’m a city bus operator making $80,000 per year and I have raises already in place for the next 4 years. In 2 more years I will be at $100,000 a year. I’m a single mom with a teenager car Paid off no credit debt and I have some savings.
    The fact that I don’t even feel comfortable trying to buy a house is ridiculous. What is our government doing trying to do to us. The math ain’t mathing!

  • @draheim90
    @draheim90 Před 22 dny +2

    My wife and I are in our mid-30s and make around $170k combined with no kids living in a small 2-bed/1-bath place in the Baltimore-DMV area. We’ll probably never own a home or a non-used car, couldn’t afford kids if we wanted em, can’t really go on vacation or buy nice things, and are saving very little for the future. Combination of absurd cost of living, frequent car- and cat-related costs, and paying off student loans we had to take out for many years both while getting our undergrad degrees and while living in Atlanta making a take-home of like $1.5k when getting our Ph.D.s.

    • @MiniM69
      @MiniM69 Před 22 dny +1

      I used to work in HR in your area and that salary seems low for someone with an advanced degree. Have you looked at civil service work in Maryland or D.C? The federal government and local governments can pay very, very well; D.C tends to match federal salary because of the high earners in the city (one of the only places in the county where the average degree is a master’s). The state of Maryland doesn’t have incredibly competitive salaries but having a Ph.D can get you a job with no experience. Plus for any of these options, you could get your loans forgiven via the feds.
      Also, look at Anne Arundel County for houses. Most of the county is only 30 minutes away on the MARC train from D.C.
      If you don’t morally oppose government work, this could be a good option for you. Good luck!

    • @draheim90
      @draheim90 Před 21 dnem

      @@MiniM69 Thanks for the information! I work at a government research institute as a post doc (still in my first year) so my salary is right around 100k, my wife is a professor at a liberal arts college so her salary is pretty low for the average Ph.D., but it's what she wants to do with her life. If I get hired long-term and/or she gets licensure to start taking her own therapy clients things may improve. The issue with my student loans is that even though I work for a government entity it's a sponsored position and I'm considered self-employed for tax purposes and cannot do PSLF. As such, I'm trying to aggressively pay them off as quickly as possible without forgiveness because otherwise I'm accruing over $400/mo. in interest alone at the moment and every dollar I put in is less money I pay in interest down the line. For my wife, she has sizable private student loans that cannot be forgiven, but she's also on a 25-year plan I think to get forgiveness for her public loans (though her monthly payments are about to almost double after recertifying).
      We live in Anne Arundel county, halfway between Baltimore and DC. Our housing costs are still over double what they were when we lived in Wisconsin the last two years. Even crappy apartments that met our needs were over $2k/mo. (we both need separate spaces for home office setups since I'm mostly remote and she does a lot of work from home on non-teaching days and weekends) not counting utilities, insurance, pet costs, etc.
      I'm also from Michigan so driving everywhere is strongly engrained in my lifestyle and I rely on a car for many things, including my sanity lol.

  • @IlikepurpleXP
    @IlikepurpleXP Před 25 dny +35

    The worst part is finally reaching that $100k “milestone” then looking at your paychecks like “wait I thought they would be a lot bigger” (as someone with student loan payments and rent)

    • @NTJedi
      @NTJedi Před 24 dny +3

      Attending college is a huge mistake for most career paths... the only categories where college should be taken is for medicine and those going into legal laws. I might have missed a few others, but almost all careers can be done without a college degree. I work as a senior software engineer within a Fortune 100 company. In the world today, the only people who care about college degrees are others who were tricked into having a college degree.

    • @streamofthesky
      @streamofthesky Před 24 dny +3

      That jump from the 12% tax bracket to the 22% bracket is very p@infu|. When you factor in state taxes, Medicare and Social Security, healthcare, etc... I end up w/ less than 60% of my gr0ss income. Every $1000 of raise really doesn't go that far since so much of it is taxed away. I never understood why they measured affordability based on gr0ss income and not net income.
      Basically, if you're poor or extremely rich (15% flat capital gains tax rate; all sorts of loopholes to use) you pay little in taxes. If you're middle class or especially "upper middle class", you get absolutely b0died by taxes.
      I've found it's far more valuable to reduce spending than try to earn more income. Every dollar not spent is like another $1.50 earned. I'm trying to learn to do car repairs and other stuff myself, anything to save money. It's funny, the premise of capitalism is you pay other people to do tasks for you so you have more time to focus on maximizing your own economic output, but our system is so br0ken that now it's genuinely more worthwhile to do things yourself rather than get a "side hus+|e" or whatever.

    • @NTJedi
      @NTJedi Před 24 dny

      @@streamofthesky Statistics show the billionaires keep becoming more wealthy yet the government keeps focusing on forcing working people to pay more taxes. It's the equivalent of a school bully beating up students for their lunch money when there's an open bank vault with bags of cash behind the bully.

    • @Honeycomblife
      @Honeycomblife Před 23 dny +2

      Rent is waste of money it's like throwing money into a garbage can. get cheap land or property and move the hell away

    • @xlerb2286
      @xlerb2286 Před 23 dny +1

      @@streamofthesky You're got it right. The old saying "it's not what you make, it's what you keep" is still true. If a person avoids debt, understands the difference between wants and needs, prioritizes putting money into investments over (most) wants (you've got to have _some_ fun), and spends money prudently (gets good value for money spent). They'll be ahead of the game.

  • @thecynicallife7096
    @thecynicallife7096 Před 26 dny +268

    If you’re over 35 and you didn’t purchase a home back during 2000-2018 , you are living paycheck to paycheck. You can’t even buy a manufactured home these days.

    • @vicepresidentmikepence889
      @vicepresidentmikepence889 Před 26 dny +19

      Im 50. I have half a million in savings, I will retire soon with a nice pension, and I've never owned a home in my life. STOP WHINNING!!!!

    • @Daveyjonesvi
      @Daveyjonesvi Před 26 dny

      ⁠@@vicepresidentmikepence889pensions no longer exist…

    • @ItsTruble
      @ItsTruble Před 26 dny +74

      @@vicepresidentmikepence889so you’re retiring into welfare?

    • @Jay-jb2vr
      @Jay-jb2vr Před 26 dny +24

      ​@@vicepresidentmikepence889 Why do trolls always think they're important??

    • @darkwoodmovies
      @darkwoodmovies Před 26 dny +35

      ​@@vicepresidentmikepence889 I mean having $500k in savings by 50 is not really rare, but the problem is that these days, $500k is nothing. Even a million, still won't buy you a house in most places, still won't own anything, and all of our savings will just be drained down to the last penny funneled into the pockets of landlord and big corporations until we die and there's nothing left.

  • @colechapman6976
    @colechapman6976 Před 21 dnem +1

    The cruelest part of the college problem is that even in the case that someone does graduate college, the Wall Street Journal wrote an article about a study that found over half of college grads aren't using their degree for their jobs. You have to really be careful about getting the right major, and doing the right internship, which for many people is cost-prohibitive as they can't afford to work in many cases for free, and you have to find that right first job out of college which is hard to do when all the entry-level jobs require 1-2 years of experience
    The worst thing is that you end up spending four years of your life studying, taking on a mountain of debt, and your lifestyle, salary, or career path has not developed in the slightest

  • @saulsibayan
    @saulsibayan Před 21 dnem +1

    What they stated is the problem, we are comparing our situation with others. Social media is making it worse as people tend to compare more they should. Life is not always a competition. Contentment will make us happy, but still strive for a better life.

  • @TheGardenMG
    @TheGardenMG Před 26 dny +28

    the house across from mine just sold for $1.53mil, the owner bought it in 1994 for $80K, yeah, good luck keeping up with that

    • @Philippinesbound42
      @Philippinesbound42 Před 26 dny +5

      Is that in the sewer called California?

    • @alexlee8617
      @alexlee8617 Před 24 dny +1

      Did you buy it? Hold for 30 years and you will get $20M for it. Should have bought it...

    • @TheGardenMG
      @TheGardenMG Před 24 dny

      @@alexlee8617 I owned mine, well with 13 years of mortgage left anyway but I don't mind if it goes up the rate it was. Can't wait to sell it and retire elsewhere.

    • @EricM93
      @EricM93 Před 5 dny

      @@alexlee8617 that has to be one of the single most ignorant things I've ever heard in my entire life.

  • @ZovaBe
    @ZovaBe Před 22 dny +1

    I'm stuck in a relationship I'm miserable in but I can't afford to leave. Every morning I cry, every evening I dread going home, I do my best to keep myself busy by spending time with family and friends but that gets exhausting. I'm seeing people with less experience getting promoted left and right because they're buddies with the managers. Despite my. 13 years of experience I can't break past entry level.

  • @andylin6560
    @andylin6560 Před 20 dny +1

    Well it's hard to save when RENT takes everything. back in 07 a two-bedroom was $800-$1000, now a two-bedroom is close to $2000, one might say the increase is not that bad, but Wages DID NOT increase alongside rent

  • @shizuokaBLUES
    @shizuokaBLUES Před 25 dny +29

    It’s a bizarre turn of events. I moved to Japan in ‘95 to enjoy a year or two abroad and make a little coin. LITTLE being the key word. Salaries here are low but single life for a young man is fun.
    28 years later wow have the tables turned.
    My salary is still about $100k but cost of living is so much lower here in Japan, especially housing!
    My $300k house is small and has no yard but was very high quality and interest was .9%.
    I’m still middle class here in japan or even upper middle.
    I don’t know how a family can do it back home without double my salary.

    • @otk88403
      @otk88403 Před 24 dny

      100k usd in japan is well within the top 10% in Japan for household income. Likely around top 7% at current exchange rates

    • @shizuokaBLUES
      @shizuokaBLUES Před 24 dny

      @@otk88403 my salary is not $100k USD alas. If it was and you were converting it at today’s exchange rate well that would be quite a good living here in Japan.
      Not really sure what the point of converting would be anyway. It’s not like I’m seeing US dollars come my way. I get paid in Yen.

    • @outwestexplorer1966
      @outwestexplorer1966 Před 24 dny +2

      .9 percent for house mortgage. Damn that's good. In us it's like 7 times higher.

    • @shizuokaBLUES
      @shizuokaBLUES Před 24 dny +1

      @@outwestexplorer1966 it IS very good. Of course in Japan you almost never make a profit on a home. They almost always depreciate greatly. Mine was 6 years old so had depreciated about 40%. So over time you aim to pay less on mortgage than you would have paid in rent. There are of course the intangibles
      Friends of mine pay even less than I do. Floating mortgage of course

    • @LeoMidori
      @LeoMidori Před 24 dny +1

      @@shizuokaBLUES Japan views real estate a lot differently and contrarily to the way many capitalist countries do. You need to live somewhere, and they prefer to live in newer spaces typically which are typically being built as older buildings get demolished after roughly 30 years. You can also get older, traditional style housing, but without many of the modern conveniences built in or available to them. Also with a largely declining populace there's not a ton of demand, so Japan has a lot to offer in terms of cheap living space.

  • @danielace4212
    @danielace4212 Před 26 dny +78

    The writing was on the wall once I began dipping into my savings. I am now achieving the American Dream in another country. What a crazy timeline that we're living in.

    • @NoFace-ke9pc
      @NoFace-ke9pc Před 24 dny

      America is a colony again. People just won't admit it. With all the signs there they still won't admit the American dream has been dead since 2006

    • @FrankandCents28
      @FrankandCents28 Před 24 dny +6

      Congratulations on your escape. We're planning ours right now.

    • @ProtoAlpha
      @ProtoAlpha Před 24 dny +2

      Our government needs to physically force corporations to start lower prices or the entire economy of this nation will go up in flames😔

    • @cocolocoflow
      @cocolocoflow Před 24 dny +1

      What country 😅?? I speak Spanish and would love to move to Spain or a Latin country ... got any suggestions??

    • @FrankandCents28
      @FrankandCents28 Před 24 dny +4

      @@ProtoAlpha Its government involvement that has caused this crisis in the first place. Prior to offering government backed student loans colleges had to price tuition at a rate most people could afford. When universities realized people could buy now and pay later on a government guaranteed loan that people couldn't file bankruptcy on, the prices began to soar. The same thing holds true for housing and healthcare. Too much government interference!

  • @randellino
    @randellino Před 21 dnem +2

    Sounds like everyone could take a lesson in budgeting, you don't "need the three row brand new SUV for 80k, you need a 5 year old Camry for$18k unless you need more seating then get the 10 year old minivan for $15. In the same way buy only what you absolutely need for everything else, then set your budget for wants and stick to it. Build your credit. Minimize extra extra expenses.

  • @maximilian9295
    @maximilian9295 Před 22 dny +1

    Living in MA, yeah its expensive, but i used to live in TX and it was actually more expensive there. I guess its what you do day to day and where exactly you live. I pay less for a house in MA than i did in TX, food is so much more affordable here, my utilities(light, internet, water) went down from like 700 mo to 170 mo!

  • @clav93089
    @clav93089 Před 24 dny +66

    I make six figures, but between the mortgage, car payments, student loan payments, HOA fees (that just skyrocketed because of insurance and massive repairs needed to the parking garage), my internet and utility bills, gas and groceries, car and home insurance, I'm left with just a couple hundred dollars after taxes, HSA, and retirement contributions. My wife was just diagnosed with cancer and can't work, so it feels like we're treading water despite my seemingly high income. We want to have kids (we're in our 30's) but feel like we need to wait until we have more savings and our car and student loan debts are gone, and of course, we have more clarity on my wife's health situation.

    • @marcoAKAjoe
      @marcoAKAjoe Před 24 dny +8

      Sorry to hear that :((

    • @om9078
      @om9078 Před 24 dny +8

      just you and your wife? lol. i Could super easily support a family of 6 on that much. more than I make now by 20 k and I already have enough. your spend to much on BS. gotta have more than your neighbors eh?

    • @Phougi
      @Phougi Před 23 dny +4

      Go full Dave Ramsey. Yeah, you'll give up everything nice you have, but at least you can survive and learn how little you actually need.

    • @RodderickPrinceParker
      @RodderickPrinceParker Před 23 dny +6

      Why would you buy a home in an HOA?

    • @Dmitchell579
      @Dmitchell579 Před 23 dny +2

      Man you're in your 30s and wife can't work no more and y'all want kids. Sounds like you're literally spending all your money too, that sucks you're still young. But I think I know exactly what your problems are lol I'll pray for you

  • @redbullskate
    @redbullskate Před 26 dny +186

    You know it’s hit rock bottom when even the news starts covering how unjust the system is

    • @Pathological_Skyrim_Modder
      @Pathological_Skyrim_Modder Před 26 dny +6

      that's literally their job

    • @krane15
      @krane15 Před 26 dny +6

      Capitalism at its finest.

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 Před 26 dny +3

      ​@krane15 there's always the capitalism guy lol

    • @pluckybellhop66
      @pluckybellhop66 Před 26 dny +5

      ​@@jsebby2284 He says capitalism but what he's really saying is: "The 1% is absorbing everything and they use capitalism to do it. Capitalism isn't the problem it's the 1%."

    • @JP-qb3ny
      @JP-qb3ny Před 26 dny +1

      @@Pathological_Skyrim_Modder the news who’s owned by the same oligarchs who control the system?

  • @jameswestergaard9793
    @jameswestergaard9793 Před 16 dny

    I, myself, my wife, and our two children SURVIVE on my 45k a year salary, with proper diligence, and choosing what's most important, you can survive. If you are reading this and make more then I. Have no fear, you have made it. But you need to change your finances and pick and choose the most important things in your life. For most of us, buying a home is a daunting item on the list, if you were fortunate enough to buy a home before 2020, you are the luckiest of our generations. Change your habits, hold down your fort and don't allow anyone to slow you down. Find your path and do your best to stay the course. That is all we can do. Figure out a strong amount you can save and put it away, that is your emergency fund. If you have an emergency fund of 2k save up you're better off then 70% if the population... Bless you and keep your head up.

  • @chelsbeaupeep
    @chelsbeaupeep Před 21 dnem

    8:44 I've been feeling this way a lot and i don't even hang out with friends often because i cant afford a day off, and i cant afford the establishment itself either

  • @Reezy884
    @Reezy884 Před 26 dny +74

    This entire video discussed everything we already know. We need solutions

    • @economicdevelopmentplannin8715
      @economicdevelopmentplannin8715 Před 26 dny +3

      How about this as a solution.
      Property taxes utilities groceries and an unlimited bus pass yearly. Are under $15k yearly per person in every single state in the US. Just payoff housing ASAP with roommates, and everything works out.

    • @cooperaiken8148
      @cooperaiken8148 Před 26 dny +9

      Cry harder for daddy government to save you.

    • @jondoe406
      @jondoe406 Před 26 dny +2

      The corporations the buy advertising on CNBC wont let them discuss solutions

    • @robnunurbiznezz7618
      @robnunurbiznezz7618 Před 26 dny

      The "solution" is going to be a worldwide reset. All debt erased. One digital currency. All controlled by a centralized world government. National sovereignty erased. Your rights abolished. It's the system that the Antichrist will inherit when he comes to power. The Satanically possessed man who the world will look to for answers. We're living Biblical prophecy in real time. You may laugh at the premise now, but keep the thought in mind as it comes to fruition. Mankind's "solution" would destroy the race if not for the return of Jesus Christ to set it all right.

    • @robnunurbiznezz7618
      @robnunurbiznezz7618 Před 25 dny

      @@cooperaiken8148 They will gladly give up their freedoms for security. It's the thought process of the cowardly and lazy. Just look what LBJ's "Great Society" has enabled in a specific race in our country. Just a microcosm of what they'd like the entire country to aspire to. We live in a generation of the soft. They're conditioned to the point that they can't survive without the government handouts. They've become slaves to their government masters. One guess how these useless people vote. They vote for their own destruction every time they cast their ballot.

  • @TravellingOurWorld
    @TravellingOurWorld Před 26 dny +97

    Property values and monthly costs have skyrocketed. They need to stop letting big companies buy up houses to rent them out later and also lower property taxes, until then I’m not buying a house.

    • @JP-qb3ny
      @JP-qb3ny Před 26 dny

      That’s the plan they want for you. You will own nothing and be happy……

    • @j6654
      @j6654 Před 26 dny +3

      Right, it's ridiculous, and what do they spend the tax money on? Letting people not work and giving them free food

    • @KRYMauL
      @KRYMauL Před 26 dny +2

      According to my conservative friend, the market will adjust these people out. I mean what, the only way anyone was able to afford to own a home back in the 1950s-1970s was through government-backed mortgages.

    • @aznosu
      @aznosu Před 26 dny

      What do you recommend... voting lol... you mean you still believe that the career politicians who embrace lobbying will do anything for the majority while the few who have hoarded the wealth can pay them off... vote til you realize how broken your system is and how nothing will change until the collapse bc it is the best system to keep modern slavery.

    • @coke8077
      @coke8077 Před 26 dny +7

      See thats the half-truth that political figures tell you to cover up the real main reason housing prices have up so fast, because it is actually the government's fault. Over-regulation of the housing market has made building way more expensive than it should be, and strict zoning regulations that haven't been changed in decades make it impossibe to build affordable housing like apartments, multiplexes, and starter homes.

  • @SpeedyA0704
    @SpeedyA0704 Před 19 dny +3

    Like how they say 100k doesn’t buy crap, when many Americans are no where near that.

  • @NathanHarrison7
    @NathanHarrison7 Před 21 dnem

    Excellent documentary. Thank you for the time and research you put into this important issue. Income Inequality Is growing every month. Shareholders have learned how to obtain record growth and profits through their industrial level investment schemes leaving everyday families unable to catch up. The result of putting profits before most people. This model worked until the businesses scaled, and the amount of shareholders with their hand in the pot increased significantly with the creation of institutional investment mechanisms.

  • @dragonofparadise
    @dragonofparadise Před 26 dny +208

    The new American dream is saving enough to move abroad to a country with more true freedom. Higher or same incomes with lower required expenses for basic human life like housing, healthcare, education and transportation to a job.

    • @simonslosar703
      @simonslosar703 Před 26 dny +21

      And what country that would be? In average gas price is over 6,5$ per gallon. In highly developed countries with comparable incomes to USA like Netherlands, Scandinavian countries, Germany, France it would be almost 8$. Groceries are also more expensive in those countries. I understand maybe stuff like healthcare can be far more expensive in USA, but sometimes y’all don’t realize how good you have it. In my country the average yearly salary is about 20-22k. Gas is 6,5$ per gallon like I said. I laugh when I hear Americans cry about 4$ gas…

    • @tupactargaryen
      @tupactargaryen Před 26 dny +28

      💯 That’s why passport bros is a thing. People think passport bros is about chasing women, no, it’s about moving to country that has a much lower cost of living, but still be able to maintain a decent lifestyle. Finding a quality/traditional women is the icing on the cake.

    • @simonslosar703
      @simonslosar703 Před 26 dny +5

      Quick google search showed me that USA is #4 ranked in income to cost of life ratio. With best countries being Switzerland, Luxembourg, Singapore… so that’s that.

    • @ShayKMBR
      @ShayKMBR Před 26 dny +5

      That's when you take out the highest student loans possible and move to a country where you want to go and they can't chase you down and garnish your wages 👍🏼

    • @travelvideoz
      @travelvideoz Před 26 dny +19

      It does not matter where you move. Many Americans especially romanticize living in Europe for "free healthcare", "free education" and so on. Many have never even set foot there, let alone lived there. As someone who has lived all over, it does not matter where you live if your spending and financial knowledge is poor, you'll still struggle. I was an immigrant ("expat" as they say) in a European country and did much better than those born there because I was disciplined and had the right mindset/skills.

  • @m.dgaius6430
    @m.dgaius6430 Před 24 dny +96

    I'm 42, a Senior Accountant, and have a 7yr old. I live paycheck to paycheck. When I save, something happens and I have to spend. I get clothes at thrift stores, use as little of every product to lengthen it's life. I buy organic food, our only splurge (shame that's a splurge).
    Having said that I have more information at my fingertips than any king or Emporer throughout virtually all of human history, I'm educated enough to know that stress kills and much of it is caused by relative perception, i am healthy, so is my daughter, we are safe and life in the safest era in recorded history, etc...
    We love life. Amor Fati.

    • @ZovaBe
      @ZovaBe Před 22 dny +7

      Truly is sad that eating healthy has to be a splurge. American greed at its finest

    • @austinsmith2235
      @austinsmith2235 Před 22 dny +2

      @@ZovaBe this is one of the biggest misconceptions of all time. The notion that fast food is somehow cheaper is comeplete bs. Doing meal prep with grocery store prices is much much lower cost than eating junk food out every day.

    • @austinsmith2235
      @austinsmith2235 Před 22 dny +4

      If you are a senior accountant living paycheck to paycheck your finances are clearly not in order. You are simply spending too much money and this is no ones problem but YOUR OWN. cut up your credit cards and stop paying 15% on your car loan and see how far that gets you...

    • @usflin
      @usflin Před 15 dny

      ​@@austinsmith2235You don't know what this person's income or expenses are, much less whether they even own a car. They could be taking the bus to work. Stop harassing people because it makes you feel better about your sad little life.

    • @austinsmith2235
      @austinsmith2235 Před 15 dny

      @@usflin just tell me your broke.

  • @melaningoddess7310
    @melaningoddess7310 Před 8 dny +1

    When I experienced how bad the economy was in 2008, I said then that being a millionaire was the new middle class. So, anything under that was just trying to make it financially. That six figure income has been a joke for many families for years now. Even single people with no children earning $100,000 isn't enough to live comfortably with the rate of inflation or during a recession. 😢

  • @Bartonhockey08
    @Bartonhockey08 Před 23 dny

    Finances I feel are very subjective.
    If you take two (2) different families of four(4) with $100,000 annual salary before tax, each family is going to have a different budget and lifestyle choices that will effects how far that $100k will go for them. While I do agree the inflation is fking ridiculous even with a household income of $190,000 before tax and family of 5 - it’s subjective. For example, we have $0.00 debt except our mortgage, and our mortgage payment is less than 20% of our monthly after tax take home pay. We are contributing 33% of our annual salaries to Roth 401k, before company match. Extra savings in the month get dumped into a high yield savings account for future pleasure spending. We also have 6+ months of monthly expenses saved in a high yield savings account earning 4.5% monthly right now. For further information, I’m in a state that supposedly requires $200,000 for a family of four (4), 😂. While I’m not in a major metropolitan city, still, it’s subjective to lifestyle and being smart with some luck (I.e., staying healthy for example).
    With that said, I have coworkers making double my household annual income and I hear them complain about finances all the time. Guess what, they spend like congress and money grows on trees and they continue getting assets that depreciate and have debt like congress.
    It’s subjective. Period.

  • @9fj1
    @9fj1 Před 26 dny +52

    I think blaming everything on inflation is wrong. Yes inflation contributes , but the other issue is corporations controlling necessities by consolidating power to do so with the only emphasis on profits for shareholders & idiotic bonuses for screwing the working class.

  • @dillonthatch4624
    @dillonthatch4624 Před 26 dny +101

    I’m here for the commenters that say it’s “not that bad and we need to quit going to Starbucks and fast food.”

    • @godfathaofyo
      @godfathaofyo Před 26 dny +18

      food delivery apps are worse than a simple starbucks and fast food, but people don't want to be inconvenience to get off their a$$ and pick i up themselves, or call the restaurant directly. Markup on food in the app, delivery fee, tip fee, and gas surcharge. Just call the restaurant directly for delivery and it will be cheaper.

    • @dillonthatch4624
      @dillonthatch4624 Před 26 dny

      @@godfathaofyo if takeout is making people go broke, they were already broke… plain n simple.

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 Před 26 dny +7

      It's not that bad and you should stop doing that

    • @dillonthatch4624
      @dillonthatch4624 Před 26 dny +1

      @@jsebby2284 😂

    • @dillonthatch4624
      @dillonthatch4624 Před 26 dny +3

      @@jsebby2284 if it’s not that bad, why are entire news organizations on both sides of the political spectrum saying it’s that bad? 😂

  • @andrewmurray9391
    @andrewmurray9391 Před 8 dny

    I've seen some of those real, real, real rural towns where some friends did buy a $40k house as truckers with a 5th grade education. It's a good place, a good life. I wish them the best. But it's in the 6th grade when we cover the compound fractions and the $800 commute.

  • @Slide61
    @Slide61 Před 8 dny +1

    Become a police officer in California. Many are making well over $300k a year. Firefighters are right in there too. On top of that you get to retire early in most instances. I turned down many law enforcement job offers when I left the Marine Corps to finish college. I became an engineer. Now retired I sometimes rewimd the clock and think what I might have done differently watching fellow Marines retire years earlier from firefighting and law enforcement. College is a total waste of time if your objective is making money.

  • @Anon1mous
    @Anon1mous Před 26 dny +72

    Saw a meme once that said you get taxed on the money you make, then you get taxed on the money you spend, the home you own, the car you buy, all the things you buy, etc. we are taxed to death today.

    • @jacoblynch9862
      @jacoblynch9862 Před 24 dny +5

      And yet all our politicians tend to want is for you to pay even more and raise those percentages on the taxes you pay it’s never enough

    • @johnkay4701
      @johnkay4701 Před 24 dny

      You've all got what you've voted for. Democrats want ever larger BIG government, more regulations, more control over the rebellious plebs, more social benefits for the work-shy & those that play the system. Are the Republicans much better? Maybe a little, but not by much. Take a look at the last 50 - 60 years of government spending; spend, spend, spend, spend, tax, tax, tax, tax, borrow, borrow, borrow.
      My country of the UK is no better; all our major political parties vote for more BIG government, more regulations & social benefits, more spending & taxation, more borrowing & later the consequential unsustainable interest payable on those colossal loans.

    • @churblefurbles
      @churblefurbles Před 24 dny +5

      @@jacoblynch9862 unlimited money for Israel and Ukraine.

    • @borginburkes1819
      @borginburkes1819 Před 24 dny

      Taxes aren’t the problem

    • @johnkay4701
      @johnkay4701 Před 24 dny

      My full reply about BIG government, tax & spend, borrow; has been deleted either by CNBC or uTube. They really don't like the truth do they.

  • @marthajean50
    @marthajean50 Před 26 dny +113

    Finance writer: It's a problem flaunting fancy purchases on social media because it makes everyone feel inadequate.
    Me: So, why are you being interviewed on social media in the ostentatious hall of a ZILLION DOLLAR MANSION?