The prevalence of loans makes me question that standard. Lots of people have big mortgages and big car payments, but then it all comes crashing down with one layoff.
To me, the line is more like, enough saved to never need to work again. Even that comes with levels, though.
Keep the same housing?
Move to rural Mississippi?
Be able to upgrade to the nicest house in your city?
You can have the savings to “retire” to the sticks without being anywhere near “rich” IMO. Unless - did all middle class kids in the late 1900s qualify as rich?
Having enough money to not worry anymore is called being rich
Eh, there are levels.
Some people wouldn’t call the first two “rich”.
I’d say richness is found between 2 and 3
Yeah, probably. It’s a little tempting to say that if you can’t afford a yacht, you’re not actually rich. That might be too rigid as a divider, IDK.
Yacht are way too expensive. Imo if you can afford a bungalow and more than one SUV/Jeep, you’re rich.
The prevalence of loans makes me question that standard. Lots of people have big mortgages and big car payments, but then it all comes crashing down with one layoff.
To me, the line is more like, enough saved to never need to work again. Even that comes with levels, though.
Keep the same housing?
Move to rural Mississippi?
Be able to upgrade to the nicest house in your city?
You can have the savings to “retire” to the sticks without being anywhere near “rich” IMO. Unless - did all middle class kids in the late 1900s qualify as rich?
I meant paid off.