Not Just the 1%: Upper Middle Class Is Larger & Richer – The Big Picture

Interesting data point — its not just the top 1% who are thriving, nor just the top 0.1%, who are really killing it — but the Upper Middle Class is doing well also. According to an Urban Institute paper, The Growing Size and Incomes of the Upper Middle Class using absolute income thresholds [adjusted for inflation and family…Read More

Source: Not Just the 1%: Upper Middle Class Is Larger & Richer – The Big Picture

Lily Tomlin — “The trouble with being in the rat race is that even if you win, you’re still a rat.”

I suspect you’ll start seeing more press about this study in the coming weeks.  I followed the link to the Urban Institute and downloaded the paper.  I pretty much stopped reading the paper when the author wrote,

The study did not adjust for regional differences in the cost of living…Not using area price differences certainly means that some families were incorrectly categorized in this five-level class structure. However, inaccurately placing people from Washington, DC, as upper middle class because they have incomes just above $100,000, even though they have high local costs and would not generally be considered as being upper middle class in that location, is offset by categorizing Des Moines, IA, families with incomes just below $100,000 as being middle class, even though those families could be considered upper middle class because costs in their area are low. Because the point of this exercise was to determine large changes in social classes, any bias one way or the other should not be large.

Talk about a fatal flaw in methodology.  Add in the faulty assumption that “…any bias one way or the other should not be large” and you have IMHO a study that is worthless.

Tell me, how can you be “upper middle class” solely by income level if you have the cost of living in Manhattan, Miami, Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles, or Seattle?

Here’s another critic of the study:

Source: oftwominds-Charles Hugh Smith: What Does It take to Be Upper Middle Class?

 

 

 

The Housing Trilemma | Oregon Office of Economic Analysis

Every city wants to have a strong local economy, high quality of life and housing affordability for its residents. Unfortunately these three dimensions represent the Housing Trilemma.  A city can achieve success on two but not all three at the same time.

Source: The Housing Trilemma | Oregon Office of Economic Analysis

Check out the graphic above courtesy of the Oregon Office of Economic Analysis.  I may have been biased about life in the middle but never had the facts to back up my opinions.  But after reading this article I now have facts.  This analysis demonstrates a city can have success on two fronts, but rarely on all three.

I started life in New York and grew up in New Jersey.  A sizeable amount of time was also spent in Dallas.  For over a decade I’ve held the belief that my family could not replicate our lifestyle and quality of life anywhere else in the country.  Well, I admit to being wrong.  We could probably do as well in Cincinnati, Omaha, or Des Moines.

If you can stand the weather, OKC is not a bad place to live in.

HT – Calculated Risk.