Posted on 06/03/2015 9:54:55 AM PDT by MichCapCon
The United Way has released a report that says the vast majority of Michigan residents need a lot more money in order to be financially stable. The study has received wide media attention (sample headline: More than 1.5 million Michigan households struggling), but the claims paint a distorted picture.
According to the study, 1.54 million households in Michigan fully 40 percent, and more than double the number previously thought are struggling to support themselves. Many of those households live at or below the federal poverty rate, but most of them are above that rate and classified by the United Way as ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed). The report says, The core of the problem is that these jobs do not pay enough to afford the basics of housing, child care, food, health care, and transportation. It measures a level based on the actual cost of basic household necessities in each county in Michigan. It adds later, ALICE households are forced to make difficult choices such as skipping preventative health care, accredited child care, healthy food or car insurance.
The report says the Household Survival Budget for a Michigan family of four is $50,345 and in order to live with stability (one that enables not just survival, but self-sufficiency) in Michigan, a family of four needs $92,409.
But these figures are not composed of estimates of what families actually need to survive. Instead, they are averages of what people are already spending on child care, transportation, health care, etc. The report assumes that anyone spending less than these average figures must be below the threshold for economic survival. Further, it does not attempt to show that citizens cant live happily and healthily by spending less than these averages in fact, most Michiganders did just that a short time ago.
For instance, the report says that in order to survive at the bare minimum a household with two adults, a preschooler and an infant need to spend nearly $600 per month on food and $700 monthly on transportation (among other things). But it is, in fact, possible to live comfortably without having to spend these amounts. (My family of four lives very well and spends significantly less).
The other interesting perspective to consider about this report is that it suggests that economic stability was out of reach for the vast majority of people throughout history. Overall, Americans are getting a much better deal on food, child care, housing, transportation and health care, and devoting a much smaller portion of their income to most of these expenditures than they did in decades past.
Health care spending is the outlier here it has increased exponentially over the decades. Not coincidentally, that is an area where taxpayers have paid more and more of the costs. But the value of this and the other four areas have increased substantially over the years.
Rising incomes and lower food prices mean the percent of personal income spent on food by Americans has fallen 60 percent since 1940, from 25 percent of family budgets to 10 percent a steady decline for decades. Americans spent about 42 percent of their income on food in 1900.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, transportation spending has declined since the 1980s (and todays vehicles are safer, more reliable and get better gas mileage). Housing has gone from 27 percent of the average household budget in 1950 to 33 percent in the 2000s, but this is mainly because people have chosen to buy larger homes. The average house size has increased more than 1000 square feet since 1973 (with smaller families).
The cost of child care has increased, but only from 6.3 percent of the average household budget in 1984 to 7.2 percent in 2010, according to Pew Research. But there are also more women in the workforce today, so much of extra spending may come from the extra income of employed women.
And for the nonessentials, things like refrigerators, washing machines, stoves, toasters, vacuum cleaners and televisions, they are more affordable than ever. As UM-Flint economics professor and Mackinac Center Scholar Mark Perry reports, it required almost 900 hours of labor to afford these amenities in 1959 today, it requires less than 200 hours of work.
None of this is to say that there arent many people in Michigan who are struggling economically, and legislators should pursue policy options that will help them. The ALICE report doesnt call for many specific reforms, except for increasing Michigans minimum wage even more. Policymakers should instead remove barriers to economic opportunities, such as overbearing licensing laws, overcriminalization, auto insurance mandates and regulatory rules (such as those covering ride-sharing services such as Uber). These policies have a disproportionate effect on low-income families and should be reformed.
That may depend on what kind of health insurance and what your personal health situation is. 5 years from now it could cost that.
Good, if you don't need it, SEND IT MY WAY...
I’ll take half of that and still have a good life.
get stoned, get laid, eat, go to sleep
Which evolved into a less tripping mindset of what I need to live/stay alive
And even now (at the risk of the prudes flaming me ... ) I pretty much live that way
Stoned is entertainment and the occasional TV, coupled with my fascination with and for life is plenty of entertainment, I tell you !
I'm (well and fantastically .. ;^) .. married
Our diet is simple and relatively inexpensive (with garden and canning fun)
God provided us with a small piece of property and a nice comfortable living area
I have it all ... stoned, laid, fed and rested.
Get simple
get GOOD
Get
Out
Of
Debt.
Oh yeah .... we do this on about 20K a year (in a good year ... otherwise about 16/17 K)
One thing is confusing: just where exactly DO they say the “poverty line” is?
Beware any agency that pretends to tell us how much we need to live on.
True, you could get by with half in cash and the other half in Free Stuff from the gummint.
Economically Stable=two Tivos, four smartphones, 2000 square feet, and <2 year old car.
I really believe that people have completely forgotten the definition of “poor”. By today’s standards, I grew up in appalling, abject poverty. But so did everyone else in my neighborhood so apparently we did not know this. Everyone just went about their business.
Family of 4 needs 2 Escalades, 1 Cadillac, and 1 Pontiac. Also 4 i6 cellphones, 1 70” flat screen and 3 50” flat screens. A lousy $50K ain’t gonna do it. I gonna need some help up in here.
My wife and I could probably survive on $92,409, but $50,345 would mean poverty for us.
As far as I’m concerned I am the poverty line
The FPL means absolutely nothing in most places, as the cost of living varies widely across the US.
Here in northern NJ 10% would go to your property taxes right off the bat; federal & state income taxes, as well as the Social Security and Medicare taxes, would eat up their pieces as well. We have among the highest car insurance rates in the nation as well; $92.5K would have a family of four just surviving without being able to fix a home or car.
This arrangement was acceptable as long as decent jobs were plentiful; now that they have gone, American workers are fleeing in droves (and illegals are being trafficked here to replace them in housing, classrooms, and store aisles). The public employees “administering” here are our new upper middle class; everyone else is either taxed into poverty or living on the freebies (sometimes while working in our swelling black market economy).
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.