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Middle class barely treads water [can no longer afford to live on two incomes]
USA Today/Yahoo News ^ | September 15, 2003 | Christine Dugas

Posted on 9/15/2003, 5:16:27 PM by ejdrapes

Middle class barely treads water

Millions of middle-class families can no longer afford to live on two incomes.

A generation ago, a typical American middle-class family lived on the income of a single breadwinner. In recent years it has taken two working spouses to live the modern middle-class dream. Now, it seems even that is not enough to survive the skyrocketing cost of housing, health care and college while saving for retirement and shouldering growing debt loads. (More background: Excerpt from The Two-Income Trap)

Bill and Terry Will of Chesapeake, Va., together earn about $70,000 a year, and yet it's a struggle to provide for their family and pay off their credit card debt. Terry, 44, is a nurse and Bill, 50, manages a warehouse that ships food and supplies to other countries.

The Wills have five children at home, ages 2 to 17. They budget every penny and have no savings, no college fund, no retirement nest egg.

Like many middle-class families often broadly defined as those earning $25,000 to $99,999 the Wills have little room to maneuver if something unexpected comes up. They barely survived when Bill's job as an oil company sales manager was eliminated in 1999. They came close to losing their home and nearly ended up in bankruptcy before they went to a non-profit credit counseling agency for help.

What happened to the Wills is being repeated in legions of middle-class homes across the USA. With personal bankruptcy at an all-time high, it's mostly the middle class that gets trapped: 92% of the record 1.6 million filers in the year ended June 30 were middle class, according to a Harvard University study.

The Wills acknowledge that they didn't know much about managing money before they went into debt counseling, but they didn't live beyond their means.

"We didn't have cable TV before, and we still don't," Terry says. "We used credit cards to pay for diapers, food and school stuff."

It may be hard to believe, but the average family of four spends 21% less on clothes and 22% less on food both at home and in restaurants than a similar family did a generation ago, according to a new book, The Two-Income Trap. And though families may spend more today on things like Internet services, DVDs and airline travel, those increases are offset by declines in other expenditures.

Instead of splurging on gourmet meals and designer clothing, families are spending more on essentials such as day care, housing and health insurance.

"Costs are rising quickly, and benefits that used to be provided by employers now must be provided by workers themselves, including health insurance and retirement," says Christian Weller, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute.

The average employee contribution toward health insurance premiums is $2,412 for family coverage this year, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. That's a 13% increase over 2002.

Housing also is eating up more of the average family's budget. About 80% of low- and moderate-income homeowners spent more than half of their income on housing in 2001, according to the Center for Housing Policy. Many experts say no more than 36% of gross monthly income should go toward credit card bills, car payments and mortgages combined.

Today, much of a family's second income goes to paying for a suburban home in a good school district, says Elizabeth Warren, Harvard law professor and co-author of The Two-Income Trap.

"Middle-class families are taking on ruinous mortgages just to find a home in the right ZIP codes," Warren says.

"The cost of living is crazy in the top-rated school district here," says Emily Derr, 25, a renter who lives in Houston with her husband, Jeremy, and their 5-month-old daughter, Madison. A house that costs $145,000 in that neighborhood would cost $20,000 less one suburb over, she says.

Using credit to make ends meet

The Derrs can't afford to buy a house yet. They have struggled since Jeremy got out of college with $16,000 in credit card bills and student loans.

Emily has a nursing degree. She had hoped that with two incomes they'd be fine. Instead, she says, "We were making a little more than minimum payments, but it didn't seem like it was going anywhere. I thought it was going to be 40 years before we'd be able to buy a house."

To economize, they moved into a cheaper apartment and sold one of two cars. But Jeremy made only $12,000 in his first year as a financial adviser for Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, and they paid $500 a month for health insurance. "I felt like I was drowning," Emily says.

Credit card debt became an albatross. Eventually, the Derrs went to a credit-counseling service for help. Jeremy joined the Army and is now in officer candidate school.

Credit card debt for middle-income families is soaring up 75% to $5,031 between 1989 and 2001, according to a new report by Demos, a non-partisan public policy organization.

"Middle-class families are using credit cards to fill in a gap between their income and costs," says Tamara Draut, director of the economic opportunity program at Demos. "It's more about maintaining their standard of living than frivolous consumption."

At one point, when Bill Will had no income and no health insurance, he still had credit cards and continued to use them. "I did what I had to do for my family," he says.

Average card debt declined somewhat in 2001, according to Federal Reserve (news - web sites) data. But some experts don't see much cause for optimism. Many families traded high-interest card debt for lower-rate home equity loans. That lowers debt payments but puts homes at risk. The percentage of homeowners facing foreclosure in the second quarter was 1.12%, down only slightly from the record 1.2% in the first three months of the year, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association of America.

Facing financial failure

As consumers shoulder more debt, bankruptcy filings have exploded. Nearly 90% of families with children who file for bankruptcy cite three reasons: job loss, divorce or medical problems, according to the Consumer Bankruptcy Project at Harvard University, the largest study of consumer bankruptcy in America. About one-third of the families owed an entire year's salary on their credit cards.

Single parents typically have the hardest time juggling financial obligations. A divorced woman with a child is nearly three times more likely to file for bankruptcy than a single person with no children, Warren says.

Pamela Robbins, 36, is a single mother of three children, ages 5, 11 and 12. Her problems snowballed after she split from the children's father about 10 years ago. "There were weeks when my groceries went on my credit cards," says the Mashpee, Mass., resident. "It was a matter of survival. I had to do it to pay the gas bill so it wouldn't get shut off."

Her credit card debt grew to $56,000. Creditors were calling. Robbins earned about $30,000 last year working two jobs to try to keep up. She runs a home day care business and works at a grocery store. Like Emily Derr, she says she felt like she was "drowning."

With bankruptcy looming, Robbins wanted to save her home. She went to Auriton Solutions, a credit-counseling agency. They negotiated with creditors to reduce her interest payments and put her on a repayment plan.

"I am still stretched to the limit," Robbins says. "But in the last six months I've noticed the debt is going down. It's going to take a few years, but eventually it's going to get cleared up."

Putting retirement at risk

Many people like Robbins manage to avoid bankruptcy by going to a credit-counseling agency. Even then, it can take years to climb out of debt. Saving for retirement usually gets put on hold.

"I have no savings account," Robbins says. "I have no IRA no retirement plan." And the need to save for college could put retirement further out of reach.

Most workers are on their own when saving for retirement as fewer companies offer traditional pensions. Nearly two-thirds of middle-income families in 2001 had only a 401(k) type of plan at work, according to a recent report by the Employee Benefit Research Institute. The median plan balance for families earning $25,000 to $49,999 was just $7,000.

Though many employers provide a matching contribution to 401(k) plans, during the economic downturn many suspended or reduced contributions.

Recent efforts in Congress to improve retirement programs have focused on increasing the maximum amount that workers can contribute each year to 401(k) plans and IRAs. "But if they can't afford to put in $2,000, they're not going to take advantage of the $3,500 limit," says Cindy Hounsell, executive director of the Women's Institute for a Secure Retirement.

"Workers not only have to save for retirement, but they have to make wise financial decisions," Weller, the economist, notes. The nearly three-year stock market downturn underscored the potential for investment losses in nest eggs.

And during the mortgage refinancing boom, many families depleted their biggest asset: home equity. Last year alone, about $200 billion of home equity was cashed out as homeowners refinanced, according to economist Mark Zandi.

"The large mortgage payments will prevent many middle-income workers from retiring when they want," says Steve Brobeck, executive director of the Consumer Federation of America.

Despite their financial woes, middle-class families are often in a Catch-22 situation. They typically make too much to qualify for federal aid programs, and yet they don't earn enough to benefit much from expanded retirement plan limits, tax cuts on dividend income, capital gains and the like, consumer advocates say.

Bill and Terry Will, meanwhile, are doing the best that they can to remain positive. It will take the couple another three to five years to get rid of their debts.

They also have to think about college for their son, Michael, who is a senior in high school. And they have no retirement savings. Terry does not contribute to her 401(k) plan at work now because all their money is going to paying off their debt.

"If we worried about all of this we'd be physically sick," Terry says. "We just have to trust in God to help us."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bankruptcy; credit; debt; inflation
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1 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:16:28 PM by ejdrapes
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To: ejdrapes
Once you let your credit card balance get to be more than you can pay off in 90 days, you are doomed. There is no way you can climb out from under that interest rate unless you get a colateralised loan and pay off the card.
2 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:20:01 PM by and the horse you rode in on (Put some ice on that)
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To: ejdrapes
Try swimming in the middle class as a single parent...hint: stay out of debt and work 2 jobs.
3 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:20:37 PM by anotherdubya
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To: ejdrapes
"A generation ago, a typical American middle-class family lived on the income of a single breadwinner."

They forgot to add "at 1/2 of today's standard of living."
4 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:22:20 PM by Chi-townChief
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To: ejdrapes
Interesting. I've read before that the "rich" and the working poor are much more likely to use coupons and bargin hunt than the middle class. I wonder if that goes to a variety of lifestyle choices as well such as movies, vacations, designer lables etc...
5 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:23:07 PM by fml
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To: ejdrapes
If you look at the life-style of the one-bread winner family of the 50-60's you will find smaller houses, fewer two car families and less vacation. That makes their real costs lower compared to the real costs of the suburban lifestyle of today.
6 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:24:46 PM by Dogrobber
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To: ejdrapes
If you look at the life-style of the one-bread winner family of the 50-60's you will find smaller houses, fewer two car families and less vacation. That makes their real costs lower compared to the real costs of the suburban lifestyle of today.
7 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:24:56 PM by Dogrobber
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To: ejdrapes
I just sped read your post......One thing I noticed is this..that IF both people that identified themselves as nurses are RN's...they both could/should be making at least $50k a year. I personally know many RN's...that are making $70k a year by themselves. They aren't killing themselves to make that type of money either. And this is in OK.

So something's fishy about this article.......BWDIK!?!?!?

FWIW-

8 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:24:56 PM by Osage Orange (If I got smart with a Democrat,.........how could they tell?)
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To: Chi-townChief
Thanks to cheap imports, that is true, but in a fiat currencey world, unlikely to last.

Especially with an elder generation on welfare, all too content to loot younger generations, it looks to be a tough couple decades for us twenty-somethings-- we might have to actually work for our retirement.

9 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:25:18 PM by JohnGalt (You can't trust freedom when its not in your hands, when everyones fightin' for their promised land)
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To: ejdrapes
The phrase "income tax" appears nowhere in this article. The problems recounted in this article cannot be properly understood without considering the drastic increase in the income tax burden over the last two or three generations.
10 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:27:19 PM by ArrogantBustard
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To: ejdrapes
Then these people need to get third and fourth jobs. If that isn't good enough, put the kids to work on a paper route or shining shoes!

As an older American, I demand prescription meds and increased welfare to support me and my cousin Tilly! And while we're at it, how about some socialized medicine?

VIVE WELFARE PIMPS/DEMOCRATS!!
*Mumbling to self,* - "Mean-spirited Republicans...."

/sarcasm
11 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:27:31 PM by Humidston (Do not remove this tag under penalty of law)
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To: and the horse you rode in on
Actually, you can. I have done it and it wasn't that difficult. You have to analyze, analyze, analyze. I know where EVERY penny goes, the cheapest way to make a meal, how many times a month I can take a weekend trip more than 10 miles from my house (gas adds up), the best temp to set for heat and air conditioning etc. After you figure out where you can cut expenses and you make a committed decision to cut the debt, it goes away pretty quickly.

It took me 13 months to get rid of nearly 6,000 on a 22,000 salary.
12 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:29:17 PM by PrincessB
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To: ejdrapes

 

I am from Massacuhusetts, and we have

Taxes . . .

 

Accounts Receivable Tax

Building Permit Tax

Capital Gains Tax

CDL license Tax

Cigarette Tax

Corporate Income Tax

Court Fines (indirect taxes)

Dog License Tax

Federal Income Tax

Federal Unemployment Tax (FUTA)

Fishing License Tax

Food License Tax

Fuel permit tax

Gasoline Tax (42 cents per gallon)

Hunting License Tax

Inheritance Tax Interest expense (tax on the money)

Inventory tax IRS Interest Charges (tax on top of tax)

IRS Penalties (tax on top of tax)

Liquor Tax

Local Income Tax

Luxury Taxes

Marriage License Tax

Medicare Tax

Property Tax

Real Estate Tax

Septic Permit Tax

Service Charge Taxes

Social Security Tax

Road Usage Taxes (Truckers)

Sales Taxes

Recreational Vehicle Tax

Road Toll Booth Taxes

School Tax

State Income Tax

State Unemployment Tax (SUTA)

Telephone federal excise tax

Telephone federal universal service fee tax

Telephone federal, state and local surcharge taxes

Telephone minimum usage surcharge tax

Telephone recurring and non-recurring charges tax

Telephone state and local tax

Telephone usage charge tax

Toll Bridge Taxes

Toll Tunnel Taxes

Traffic Fines (indirect taxation)

Trailer registration tax

Utility Taxes

Vehicle License Registration Tax

Vehicle Sales Tax

Watercraft registration Tax

Well Permit Tax

Workers Compensation Tax

 Not one of these taxes existed 100 years ago and . . .

our nation was the most prosperous in the world,

had absolutely no national debt,

had the largest middle class in the world, and

Mom stayed home to raise the kids.

What the Hell happened?


13 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:33:57 PM by Radix
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To: ArrogantBustard
It isn't just income taxes though. It's property and local taxes as well. AISD raised our taxes, then the County raised our property taxes, and now the city council just raised our taxes by another 7% on top of everything else. A total of 12% increase over 1 year.

I'm currently looking to move back to Minnesota. The taxes down here are no longer cheaper than it was back up north. Even with MN state income taxes, my tax burden up there was almost half what it is down here in Austin.

14 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:34:41 PM by Dead Corpse (For an Evil Super Genius, you aren't too bright are you?)
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To: ArrogantBustard
It isn't just income taxes though. It's property and local taxes as well. AISD raised our taxes, then the County raised our property taxes, and now the city council just raised our taxes by another 7% on top of everything else. A total of 12% increase over 1 year.

I'm currently looking to move back to Minnesota. The taxes down here are no longer cheaper than it was back up north. Even with MN state income taxes, my tax burden up there was almost half what it is down here in Austin.

15 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:34:52 PM by Dead Corpse (For an Evil Super Genius, you aren't too bright are you?)
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To: Radix
Would you like a towel with those taxes? ;-)
16 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:35:07 PM by Humidston (Do not remove this tag under penalty of law)
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To: Dead Corpse
Internal Server Error. Sorry for the double up.
17 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:35:50 PM by Dead Corpse (For an Evil Super Genius, you aren't too bright are you?)
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To: and the horse you rode in on
high credit card debt. people financing everything. refinancing the house to pay off the credit cards. rack up the credit cards again. 2nd and 3rd mortgages. 125% LTV loans. i hate credit cards.
18 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:36:33 PM by MatthewViti
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To: All
I use to be one of those who had very little sympathy for folks who ran themselves into bankruptcy with credit cards until I actually had two close friends go under for the very same reason.

Both were professionals, pilots for major airlines who lost jobs after 9/11. They immediately began job hunting and load shedding unnecessary items until all the savings ran out, and then they began selling anything they could, they moved into small apartments etc…

The final straw was bankruptcy, the credit cards didn’t want to budge on interest rates and gave the credit counseling people flack cause the guy was unemployed and one was even sued and won a judgment against a guy.

When your out of work with none in sight and even smaller jobs won’t hire you for fear you’ll leave after they train you or the airlines begin hiring again and you’ve got to feed your family you do what you gotta do.

19 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:38:33 PM by The Magical Mischief Tour
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To: Dead Corpse
Thank you for furthering my point. I see no mention of property taxes in this article either. And let's not forget that many states have increased their sales and gasoline taxes a few times, as well.
20 posted on 9/15/2003, 5:38:36 PM by ArrogantBustard
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