Even on a $24k student salary I managed to save around $6k/yr., and indulging in all the luxuries I care for I spend less than 35% of my current after-tax pay. I don’t feel like I’ve ever had to “micromanage” my finances or spend more than a few extra minutes a week to do this.
The trouble is that students (including graduate students) have ways to live extremely cheaply while maintaining reasonably high status. For people who are beyond that stage in life, either because they’re too old or because they have families, there are no such options.
As a general rule, unless you’re living in the middle of nowhere, housing costs are very high in all places nice enough to provide a respectable middle class environment for raising kids. Even if you don’t have kids, pursuing cheap living options beyond a certain age tends to signal low class and/or disreputability.
Your point is well taken. Not only do I not have children or dependents, and not only am I still somewhat in “grad student mode”, but I plan on eventually going back to school, so I don’t really intended to leave that mode before then.
In fact, I probably have an even more extreme form of this condition. I’ve never been too bothered too much by signaling low status, but I’ve actually been pained when I signal high status. My first (and only) car bothered me because while I bought it extremely cheaply, it was still in good shape. I feel like I ought not to be driving a vehicle that has working door handles, heating and A/C. My car certainly doesn’t signal high-status, but it doesn’t signal low-status as strongly as I’d like.
All of that said, the idea of spending 95% of a $100k salary does not sound instrumentally rational at all even if status is a highly-held value.
I object a bit to
housing costs are very high in all places nice enough to provide a respectable middle class environment for raising kids
My parents together usually made less than $20k/yr. while I was growing up (usually fluctuating around the poverty line). I don’t know how much they spent on housing (probably a large fraction of that), but I went to an expensive private high school (on scholarship, of course) and didn’t mind bringing home friends that came from $250k income families. I really don’t think my housing situation was bad even to their tastes, and it certainly isn’t somewhere I’d mind raising my kids.
datadataeverywhere:
The trouble is that students (including graduate students) have ways to live extremely cheaply while maintaining reasonably high status. For people who are beyond that stage in life, either because they’re too old or because they have families, there are no such options.
As a general rule, unless you’re living in the middle of nowhere, housing costs are very high in all places nice enough to provide a respectable middle class environment for raising kids. Even if you don’t have kids, pursuing cheap living options beyond a certain age tends to signal low class and/or disreputability.
Your point is well taken. Not only do I not have children or dependents, and not only am I still somewhat in “grad student mode”, but I plan on eventually going back to school, so I don’t really intended to leave that mode before then.
In fact, I probably have an even more extreme form of this condition. I’ve never been too bothered too much by signaling low status, but I’ve actually been pained when I signal high status. My first (and only) car bothered me because while I bought it extremely cheaply, it was still in good shape. I feel like I ought not to be driving a vehicle that has working door handles, heating and A/C. My car certainly doesn’t signal high-status, but it doesn’t signal low-status as strongly as I’d like.
All of that said, the idea of spending 95% of a $100k salary does not sound instrumentally rational at all even if status is a highly-held value.
I object a bit to
My parents together usually made less than $20k/yr. while I was growing up (usually fluctuating around the poverty line). I don’t know how much they spent on housing (probably a large fraction of that), but I went to an expensive private high school (on scholarship, of course) and didn’t mind bringing home friends that came from $250k income families. I really don’t think my housing situation was bad even to their tastes, and it certainly isn’t somewhere I’d mind raising my kids.