Who Counts as 'Rich'?

Discussion in 'In the News' started by z, Dec 12, 2011.

  1. z

    z Well-Known Member

    In the United States, how many rich people don't realize they're rich, at least relative to the rest of the country. Gallup has surveyed Americans to ask what they believe the cutoff for being "rich" should be. The median response was that a person would need to make at least $150,000 to be considered rich.

    According to the Tax Policy Center's calculations on income distribution, a household earning cash income of $150,000 would fall somewhere between the 89th and 90th percentiles. In other words, the typical American believes anyone in about the top tenth of the income distribution counts as "rich."

    President Obama and others, on the other hand, have set the cutoff around $250,000 when discussing "raising taxes on the rich." Households earning cash income of $250,000 are somewhere between the 96th and 97th percentiles.

    As you might expect, answers to Gallup's survey question on the threshold for being "rich" varied tremendously by demographics and geography. For example, men cited a higher bar than women did --$150,000 versus $100,00, respectively.

    Note that respondents with children under 18 said they would require $200,000 before considering themselves rich, whereas the childless were satisfied with a $100,000 benchmark. (That reminds me of this xkcd cartoon.)
    As you might expect, those who live in urban areas -- like New York City, where the cost of living is very high -- or in suburbs had higher standards for being "rich" than did Americans who live in towns or rural settings.


    Here is breakdown of the responses.

    http://finance.yahoo.com/news/counts-rich-220507934.html
     
  2. archangel

    archangel Well-Known Member

    tell me something I don't. I think we all knew this but maybe were not aware of the numbers.
     
  3. andreboba

    andreboba Well-Known Member

    You're in a different lifestyle bracket when you earn $200K+ a year. It's not crazy money, but it's doing so much better than most Americans. However many people who earn $200K don't have a lifestyle much different than people who earn $60-90K. It all depends.
    Some people are just more efficient in how they spend their money and get more bang for their dollar.

    THe problem is most folks aspire to live well beyond their means.

    In my head, 'RICH' starts when you have at least $750K net worth.
     

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