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What exactly is "Middle Class" Anyway?


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2011 Oct 4, 3:14am   19,151 views  68 comments

by tjjenkins   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

I read almost every day about the struggles of "middle class" families, or, more commonly, the decline of the "middle class," or something like "middle class" hit hard by housing bust. Rarely, if ever, is that term actually defined. I am wondering what people on this forum, who seem very informed regarding economic and social issues, think would be a fair definition of middle class. Using only income as the marker, which is of course imperfect for many reasons, I would say that $40,000-$70,000 is lower middle, $70,000 to $120,000 is middle, and $120,000-$250,000 is probably upper middle, for a family of four. Anybody else have an opinion on this? What exactly does it mean when the press reports that "middle class unable to obtain mortgages."

#housing

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1   benviews   2011 Oct 4, 3:19am  

I think that is too high. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Household_income_in_the_United_States

This implies middle class is more $25-$75k.

2   FortWayne   2011 Oct 4, 3:30am  

Unless you are a multi-millionaire or homeless you are middle class. That's the "political" definition when politicians are trying to appeal to emotions of their constituency.

Once you agree and vote for tax increases and spending... these same politicians will go back to handing money out to their favorite groups forgetting the "middle class". Democrats will hand out to unions and financial sector, Republicans to military institutions and financial sector. There is a lot of incest there on who gets the tax dollars, middle class isn't part of it though.

3   DrPepper   2011 Oct 4, 3:42am  

A middle class person should be able to own a home, own a car, go on a a couple of weekend getaways each year, go on one long distance vacation every year, and mabye travel overseas every couple of years. Give or take.

I'm not sure if we can define it with an income number since situations are different, but price inflation in housing, education, and medical over the last 20 years has seriously eroded the traditional comfort level of the middle class.

4   tjjenkins   2011 Oct 4, 3:46am  

I don't think the numbers I suggested are too high based on the wiki article. Median income (which is a little over $50K) and middle class are not really the same thing. I would expect the typical middle class income to be higher than the median income, for the reason that the classes above and below the middle class are not the same size. The working and lower classes are much larger, in terms of number of persons, than the upper class. Thus, the incomes of the typical middle class person would be higher than someone at the median of all persons in a given society. If the classes above the middle class (upper) and below the middle class (working/lower) had the exact same number of persons, then I would expect a person with the median income to also have an income that placed him right in the middle of the middle of the middle class. In other words, if 60% of a society can be considered working or lower class (in terms of income) and only 10% can truly be considered upper (in terms of income), then the middle class would occupy the income range between the 60th and 90th percentile, placing the typical middle class income at the 75% percentile.

5   lb51   2011 Oct 4, 4:43am  

I think your range needs to be bumped up a lot more. In some cities, a $100,000 six figure salary for a family of four does not go very far. A basic 3 bedroom home in the bay area easily rents for $3000.00 per month. Where I live, $111,000 is the max income to qualify for affordable housing for a family of four. That number qualifies for a 900 sq. ft. 2 bedroom apartment that rents for $2000.00 to $2300.00 per month.

6   Patrick   2011 Oct 4, 5:02am  

Two posts with same title merged to make this one.

7   Â¥   2011 Oct 4, 5:42am  

I am wondering what people on this forum, who seem very informed regarding economic and social issues, think would be a fair definition of middle class

Middle class is not an absolute salary range (it depends on the cost of housing for one), and there's overlap between lower class and upper class.

Middle class to me is having to work for a living, but not suffering undue poverty, nor enjoying undue wealth.

Lower class to me is having unmet needs, which is poverty.

Upper class is having the freedom of not having to work for a living thanks to money making money for you.

Middle class can go either way, into poverty or upper class, depending on the breaks.

There is also lower middle class and upper middle class, where the lines begin to blur. Medical professionals are the latter, and plenty of people are in the former with a few bad breaks or poor life decisions.

8   tts   2011 Oct 4, 5:53am  

lb51 says

I think your range needs to be bumped up a lot more. In some cities, a $100,000 six figure salary for a family of four does not go very far.

That is a problem with bubblish or still boomed out home prices and not wage classification. $100K is in the top 5-10% of wage earners nationwide so no way in heck could it be considered middle class.

9   terriDeaner   2011 Oct 4, 6:01am  

tts says

That is a problem with bubblish or still boomed out home prices and not wage classification. $100K is in the top 5-10% of wage earners nationwide so no way in heck could it be considered middle class.

BINGO. This is just a bit of bubbly Bay Area bias. According to this table only the top ~20-30% or so (of households?) make around $100K or more, provided those #'s represent median values per fifth. 100K+ is definitely more upper class than middle class.

10   HydroCabron   2011 Oct 4, 6:09am  

Thanks to reading patrick.net, I now understand "middle class" to mean having a half-empty shipping container of shotgun shells and some potatoes, but no firefight advantage over the neighbors. Behind on their cannibal anarchy and zombie apocalypse preparations, the middle class have not had time to take a shit on a banker's face.

11   tts   2011 Oct 4, 6:13am  

terriDeaner says

BINGO.

Yea going by your chart middle class wages would be $35k-73k in 2006 which probably hasn't changed much since then. This makes lots more sense and I'd agree with it.

12   tts   2011 Oct 4, 6:36am  

SFace says

The context was what is middle class for a family of four?

The overwhelming majority of house holds make less than $75K a year. ~73% according to the wiki.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Household_income_in_the_United_States

Median for households is like $45K. So the $35-73K estimate is still pretty much dead on.

Only 15% make $100K or more....

13   terriDeaner   2011 Oct 4, 6:45am  

SFace says

The context was what is middle class for a family of four?

OP does not specify this.

SFace says

A household includes a 24 year old non-dependent and/or 65+ year old retiree. Because many households consist of a single person, average household income is usually less than average family income,

Again, many types of household can be (were) middle-class, not just 2 parent 2 kid types.

SFace says

San Bruno is a median type city in the SFBA,

How about thinking outside the Bay Area box? It is already been established that it is NOT representative of the rest of the country.

14   tts   2011 Oct 4, 6:49am  

SFace says

San Bruno is a median type city in the SFBA

You're reasoning and math is solid except for one thing: middle class is a general term that encompasses the entire country and you're trying to mash it down into a city sized thing and it doesn't work that way.

No one talks about what is middle class in say the Rust Belt vs. what is middle class in San Bruno, they just say the Rust Belt is depressed and people there tend to be poor as fuck because the wages are so low.

15   Â¥   2011 Oct 4, 6:50am  

terriDeaner says

100K+ is definitely more upper class than middle class.

Upper class includes people making $1B+ per year.

$100K can be an upper class income, e.g. the capital return on $2M -- but it depends on the discretionary household income.

Once taxes, housing, insurance, retirement savings, food, clothing, car expenses, etc come out, $100,000/yr doesn't go so far in some areas. . .

$100K in any area is certainly towards the upper-middle class. But far from upper class if you are the typical wage slave.

16   tts   2011 Oct 4, 6:52am  

Bellingham Bob says

Upper class includes people making $1B+ per year....$100K in any area is certainly towards the upper-middle class. But far from upper class if you are the typical wage slave.

Congrats for rediscovering the wealth disparity issue. Just because the top .1% or whatever have sucked up a vastly disproportionately amount of the wealth doesn't mean that $100K isn't upper class.

17   terriDeaner   2011 Oct 4, 7:01am  

Bellingham Bob says

$100K can be an upper class income, e.g. the capital return on $2M -- but it depends on the discretionary household income.

Once taxes, housing, insurance, retirement savings, food, clothing, car expenses, etc come out, $100,000/yr doesn't go so far in some areas. . .

Good point. What we need here is a good definition of 'effective income', particularly in the context of 'affordability' metrics.

18   anonymous   2011 Oct 4, 7:11am  

lb51 says

Where I live, $111,000 is the max income to qualify for affordable housing for a family of four. That number qualifies for a 900 sq. ft. 2 bedroom apartment that rents for $2000.00 to $2300.00 per month.

lb, how does this work? Do you mean there are rental subsidies for families making this much? Or reserved housing at these rents?

19   tjjenkins   2011 Oct 4, 7:12am  

I think something that is missing here is that "middle class" (to me at least) refers to a lifestyle and not where one might fall in terms of percentile of income in a given group. For example, I believe that the median income for Bangldesh is about $5,000. Bangladesh has a population of about 150 million people. Assume that 30 million or so people in Bangladesh have incomes that place them in the middle distribution, say $4,000 to $6,000. Would we then say that Bangladesh has a "massive middle class" consisting of 30 million people! Of course not. These people are poor not middle class, and I bet only persons with incomes in the top 5% of so in Bangladesh could actually live what we refer to as a middle class life. Making $1,500 a year in Somalia might put you at the 50th percentile of incomes in Somalia, but that does not make you a middle class person. It makes you poor.

I think refence must be made a a middle class lifestyle (a 4-2 home with 2,000 square feet, two moderate cars, a reasonable allowance for clothes and vacations, etc). Based on all that, somehwhere arounf $70-120K seems about right to me nationally, while $100-150K is probably closer for the Bay Area.

20   tts   2011 Oct 4, 7:21am  

tjjenkins says

For example, I believe that the median income for Bangldesh is about $5,000.

You can't compare what constitutes middle class by wages across nations. There are all sorts of factors outside of wages that will effect what amounts to middle class like style of government, taxes, currency status, etc.

21   tts   2011 Oct 4, 7:30am  

SFace says

for family of 4: 74,801 in CA
about 68,000 nationally (eyeball test)

So still pretty much in line with wages and national household numbers. Thanks for digging this up though.

22   Â¥   2011 Oct 4, 7:33am  

tts says

amount of the wealth doesn't mean that $100K isn't upper class.

$100,000 gross
Less 15% off the top for payroll taxes
Less $16,500 IRA and $5000 IRA
Less $20,000 for income taxes
Less $20,000 for rent
Less $10,000 for car(s)

leaves $13,500 a year discretionary income.

"Upper class" my ass.

23   terriDeaner   2011 Oct 4, 7:39am  

tjjenkins says

I think refence must be made a a middle class lifestyle (a 4-2 home with 2,000 square feet, two moderate cars, a reasonable allowance for clothes and vacations, etc). Based on all that, somehwhere arounf $70-120K seems about right to me nationally, while $100-150K is probably closer for the Bay Area.

So this is where the idea of an 'effective income' comes in. To afford all of the thing you list, you need some disposable income above what is ABSOLUTELY needed (still sort of hard to define...) in terms of housing, food, taxes, health care, child care/tuition, fuel + energy costs, etc.. Once you subtract the cost of the absolutes from the income (plus available credit as well, perhaps), you will get a much better idea of who can afford the 'middle class' lifestyle you describe.

Such an 'effective income' should help subtract out the geographic patterns that otherwise heavily influence income levels and living expenses.

tts says

You can't compare what constitutes middle class by wages across nations. There are all sorts of factors outside of wages that will effect what amounts to middle class like style of government, taxes, currency status, etc.

But probably not at international scales, as tts suggests.

24   terriDeaner   2011 Oct 4, 7:42am  

SFace says

http://www.cec.sped.org/Content/NavigationMenu/SpecialEdCareers/ESTIMATED_STATE_MEDIAN_INCOME.pdf

for family of 4: 74,801 in CA
about 68,000 nationally (eyeball test)

Yes, thanks for the link.

Bellingham Bob says

"Upper class" my ass.

This clearly highlights the disconnection between what income levels exist in the US, and what they represent in terms of lifestyle. That so many families and/or households make LESS THAN 100k tells us that most Americans are no longer living the 'middle-class' lifestyle of the previous two generations.

25   tts   2011 Oct 4, 7:49am  

Bellingham Bob says

leaves $13,500 a year discretionary income.

"Upper class" my ass.

OK now run those numbers for someone who makes $55K a year or less and tell me again that $100K isn't upper class.

Pro tip: that $55K wage earner likely won't have a IRA or savings of any sort to fall back on and their car is probably a cheap econo box or fairly used and their discretionary income will still be much less as well. They'll also live in a mediocre to down right crappy area, especially in SF or anywhere in SoCal for that matter. The differences are huge, HUUGE, for you to downplay this is incredible.

26   tjjenkins   2011 Oct 4, 8:06am  

Bellingham Bob: I do not think a 100K income could even remotely qualify one as upper class. What kind of home does an upper class person live in? What kind of cars do they drive? Where did they and there children go to school/university?

I think "upper class" refers to a person that lives on a large estate (or luxury condo in a place like SF or NY), has multiple luxury automobiles (perhaps even a driver), belongs to exclusive country clubs, probably went to Harvard/Yale etc., and an exclusive prep school, and has substantial financial security..

I think $500K is the bare min. for an upper class life, and $1M is a better floor.

27   LAO   2011 Oct 4, 8:12am  

tts says

That is a problem with bubblish or still boomed out home prices and not wage classification. $100K is in the top 5-10% of wage earners nationwide so no way in heck could it be considered middle class.

Yeah, but those 100K a year jobs tend to be clustered around big cities... More 100K earners per square mile in a big city than elsewhere.

28   tts   2011 Oct 4, 8:20am  

tjjenkins says

I think $500K is the bare min. for an upper class life, and $1M is a better floor.

There is upper class and then there is wealthy or rich and past that is super rich. I do believe you're talking about the rich here.

29   tts   2011 Oct 4, 8:23am  

Los Angeles Renter says

Yeah, but those 100K a year jobs tend to be clustered around big cities... More 100K earners per square mile in a big city than elsewhere.

The thing is most people live near or in big cities. Really the vast overwhelming majority of them too.

"As of 2011, about 250 million Americans live in or around urban areas. That means more than three-quarters of the U.S. population shares just about three percent of the U.S. land area."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_the_United_States#Cities

This is even more true in some countries outside the US like Japan where the population density is insane compared to the US.

edit: oh and its been true for decades that most people in the US live in or very near cities. The big shift from agri to city oriented populations really picked up steam around the late 1800's and was consolidated post WWII if I remember my history books correctly. So there isn't some sort of new demographics shift at play here either.

30   terriDeaner   2011 Oct 4, 8:26am  

Los Angeles Renter says

Yeah, but those 100K a year jobs tend to be clustered around big cities... More 100K earners per square mile in a big city than elsewhere.

Again, more confounding issues with geographically linked demography.

31   terriDeaner   2011 Oct 4, 8:28am  

tts says

tjjenkins says

I think $500K is the bare min. for an upper class life, and $1M is a better floor.

There is upper class and then there is wealthy or rich and past that is super rich. I do believe you're talking about the rich here.

Yep. 100K/yr in any ole' small town in flyover land would make you one of the wealthiest families in town, 500K/yr would make you one of the wealthiest folks in the tri-county area, and 1M/yr would put you into the regional (and potentially national) urine-hoarding, casino-owning financial elite.

32   Â¥   2011 Oct 4, 9:02am  

tts says

The thing is most people live near or in big cities. Really the vast overwhelming majority of them too.

yes and no. . .

the sum of the 275 cities with population over 100,000 only comes out to ~80M . . .

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_cities_by_population#Incorporated_places_over_100.2C000_population

33   michaelsch   2011 Oct 4, 9:12am  

The idea and the definition of middle class was highjacked by corporative thinking in America.

Historicaly (since late middle age) it had nothing to do with income. It was about economic and social independence.

It was about being neither a bond nor a lord (landlord mostly). It meant that most of your income comes of your own labor/trade rather that someone elses; and most of your labor contributes to your income rather that to someone elses income. You could be a very poor farmer (but owner of your land) or a very rich lawer. Other examples of middle class members are millers, smiths, doctors, artists, actors etc.

In this sense the idea that a corporate manager or a public school teacher may think he belongs to middle class is a non-sense. Even more ridiculous is to consider a home debtor as a middle class member, no matter what his income is.

34   tts   2011 Oct 4, 9:14am  

Bellingham Bob says

yes and no. . .

I guess it depends on what you think of as "close to" and wether that matters or not really effects the numbers. Given the wiki's info. though (ie. 3/4 of US pop. in ~3% of land) I think its pretty relevant in showing the effects of wage localization to be over blown.

35   MattBayArea   2011 Oct 4, 9:15am  

I don't think you can just look at a graph of US income distribution to figure out what income range constitutes the 'middle' class. You really need some other metric, some measure of the lifestyle afforded by a certain income in a certain area.

36   tts   2011 Oct 4, 9:17am  

michaelsch says

The idea and the definition of middle class was highjacked by corporative thinking in America.

This is an interesting point but I don't believe anyone uses this definition you're giving anymore for "middle class", certainly since WWII and maybe even post Civil War. Some language and social drift over that time period is reasonable and common usage should be observed when discussing this stuff anyways so as not to confuse everyone.

37   tts   2011 Oct 4, 9:20am  

Matt.BayArea says

You really need some other metric, some measure of the lifestyle afforded by a certain income in a certain area

No you don't. Middle class is a term applie across an entire country and not a county, city, or state term. It loses all meaning once you start breaking down by localization since everyone's definition of middle class then becomes different.

edit: you can argue that certain places might afford you a better standard of living due to the local economy but that is totally different from class. Standard of living is after all somewhat wishy washy.

38   terriDeaner   2011 Oct 4, 9:40am  

tts says

No you don't. Middle class is a term applie across an entire country and not a county, city, or state term. It loses all meaning once you start breaking down by localization since everyone's definition of middle class then becomes different.

edit: you can argue that certain places might afford you a better standard of living due to the local economy but that is totally different from class. Standard of living is after all somewhat wishy washy.

So again, we come back to the issue that 'middle-class' can be defined by both income level (money in), AND by lifestyle/standard-of-living (how money goes out).

I agree that the money in is best defined on a national level - we are talking about the AMERICAN middle-class, or lack thereof, after all.

But even though measuring how the money goes out is indeed slippery, I think it is important. It is hard to quantify... take for example discretionary spending. It seems like a fuzzy metric; does it really reflect more what one CHOOSES to spend on housing rather than what one CANNOT AVOID spending on housing? Ultimately some things that some folks consider essential, baseline spending constitute luxuries for others.

(Oh yeah, I see you commented on discretionary income above...)

39   mbodell   2011 Oct 4, 11:34am  

I think many ideas are being conflated.

It is true that a family that makes $200K a year probably is closer to a family that makes $20K a year than one of the top 1000 households in the country, it doesn't make the $200K family middle class (no matter how many times politician's consider them entitled to "middle class tax cuts").

I think the quintile method is good. As of 2004 (if anything, likely lower than this now for the non-top quintiles - note this is household income, not individual income - individual income is lower than this)

Lower class: household income $0/year to $18,500/year - fully 20% of households.

Lower-middle class: household income of $18,500/year to $34,738/year - another full 20% of the population.

Middle class: household income of $34,738/year to $55,331/year - another full 20% of the population.

Upper-middle class: household income of $55,331/year to $88,030/year - another full 20% of the population.

Upper class: household income of more than $88,030/year - this represents the top 20% of the population.

I think it is legitimate to consider middle class as either just the middle 20%, or as a general term counting the lower-middle and upper-middle and getting a full 60% of the population (skipping the lowest 20% and the highest 20%).

But I don't think it is legitimate to consider folks in the top 20% as part of the middle class. It stretches the definition of middle too much.

You can further divide the upper class into the rich, the filthy rich, the super rich, the masters of the universe or whatever divisions you want (top 5% are those >$157,176; top 1.5% are those >$250,000; etc.). And there is a point that those making $95,000 aren't that similar to those making $10,000,000; but that doesn't mean either are "middle class". That labeling is disingenuous and designed to confuse.

Compare to the OP of "Using only income as the marker, which is of course imperfect for many reasons, I would say that $40,000-$70,000 is lower middle, $70,000 to $120,000 is middle, and $120,000-$250,000 is probably upper middle". Now I'm using household income and he's using family of 4 but that shouldn't effect things too much as likely in OP's family of 4 there were only at most 2 parents working. But that division has 43.08% living in poverty/the lower class (I.e., below the middle class - below event the "lower-middle"). That division has 25.64% of people in the "lower-middle" bucket. Less than 15% of the people in the middle-middle bucket. Less than 15% of people in the upper-middle bucket. And only 1.5% of people above the middle class. So 43.08% of people are below the middle but only 1.5% are above? Some middle!

In practice I think a bunch of people define middle class to mean anyone who makes what I make is middle class (or maybe anyone who makes between half of what I make and twice what I make is middle class).

A different interesting definition of middle class might be the middle class (and lower class) are those people for whom they get more than $1 of benefit for each $1 of taxes they pay. The upper class are those who get less than $1 of benefit for each $1 of taxes they pay.

40   thomas.wong1986   2011 Oct 4, 12:39pm  

Bellingham Bob says

$100,000 gross
Less 15% off the top for payroll taxes
Less $16,500 IRA and $5000 IRA
Less $20,000 for income taxes
Less $20,000 for rent
Less $10,000 for car(s)
leaves $13,500 a year discretionary income.
"Upper class" my ass.

You forgot the rug rats..

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