Showing posts with label The Middle Class is shrinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Middle Class is shrinking. Show all posts

Friday, August 2, 2013

My Ramblings on Middle Class Erosion

         

This must be a popular middle class lunch spot.   So far, there is no light at the end of the tunnel. There are however, LIGHTS at the end of the tunnel, and we all know what that means.     (Photo: www.zionstrumpet.com)






    I think that long term readers of my blogs probably already know that I don't hail from a wealthy family.   Some of my ancestors left Scotland for Nova Scotia as some of the original European settlers there. One was employed by the Crown to built homes there and wound up in debt because eating and feeding ones family in those years in unsettled Nova Scotia with all sorts of restrictions from the Crown concerning not trading with the indigenous Mik-Mac and the French,  were tough.  Some of his sons were actually indentured servants, and so it always strikes me as odd when people assume my family kept slaves because we are white, when in fact, for a time, some of my ancestors worked pretty much as slaves.   My paternal grandfather's family came from England and were one of the first families to settle Northern California as cattle ranchers.  My great grandparents worked like dogs beside their Chinese employees who were not only their employees, but their friends in an era in which the Chinese were not treated well in California.  They eventually amassed assets, but the bulk of their money and investments were lost during the Great Depression.   My mother came from England, and most of her family's assets were decimated during the war, as were most peoples there.   So, I came to the world with frugal parents who valued education and culture but who thought the trappings of wealth were foolish.
            When my mother left England after WWII and married my father, she had already had a very good job in England. She was a high level employee in the British equivalent of the Federal Reserve.  My father had completed college in England and had been an explorer.  They settled in Marin County, California where my paternal grandmother had a home. My mother quickly accepted a fairly high level job with the Bank of California, one which a woman had never held prior.  Both of them worked hard and saved their money, but they were decidedly middle class. I was born in California. My father kept the hospital bill. It was higher than most bills for childbirth of the time, yet it was only three hundred dollars and some change.
            A couple of years after I was born, my father took a job in electronics in New Jersey.  My brother was born in the mid-sixties there.  Both of my parents proceeded to raise us with frugality, not because we were poor, but because this was the way to raise children who could earn and hold on to the money they earned, and spent frugally when it was necessary.
             My mother and father were each masters with their money.  My father chose not to buy a new car at any juncture of his life. He always bought good used cars, and generally from individuals at work, where he believed the best deals were. He also believed that most people would be honest about any issues the car had.  My parents furnished the large home they bought not from furniture stores, but from auctions, church sales and people from work.  The house always looked as if they were wealthy, when in point of fact, they usually chose jobs which gave them a lot of time with family, and made less than they probably could have earned at that time. They assembled a home one item at a time, and my mother made the slip covers we had. She even took a book from the library and taught herself to reupholster furniture.  To this day, I still can't pay money to reupholster anything, but then I don't have the spatial relations skills and the patience my mother had.
           I was trained well, and when I married and ultimately gave birth to four children and adopted one, I applied the lessons of frugality I had been taught both consciously and unconsciously.    I mention all of this because by now, we should be wealthy using all the modalities we were taught..   We should at least be decidedly solidified and safe within the middle class of the United States.
            Two of my children have completed university, in part with student loans they took themselves.  One of them is in college now, and the son we adopted several years ago, will likely go next year.  We will help if we can, but I won't be writing any big checks. 
             When our children were small we bought large acreage in the US for much less than the going rate because it was undeveloped and quite a distance from anything.   This farm was only built as a result of this choice we made long ago.  We should be safe and secure within the Middle Class, and yet we are not.
The inflation that our government says does not exist hits hard in the area of fuel for cooking, heating and driving for work or medical care.   Our medical care costs have risen exponentially.  Our homeowner's insurance costs have risen 40% in the last three years, and in 25 years of owning five homes one after another, we have never made a claim.   Our registrations, personal property tax for cars, dog licenses, professional license for nursing, my husband's certifications for his profession have all skyrocketed.
            In all honesty, I don't think we will be able to hold on to being members of the Middle Class. I also don't think that retirement will ever be possible for us.  Our retirement account was devalued in 2008, and has not recovered.
           As for our friends, also members of "The Middle Class", many of them lost their homes since 2008.  People who were well established with businesses, law practices, building contractors, or employment for companies have lost homes, cars, businesses, and retirement accounts.   Most of them did not make foolish decisions financially.  They created lives which depended upon making 60-75% of what they were making, and then the economy changed sufficiently that this was no longer possible.  Even relocation did not help some of them. I know people who are college graduates, and people who aren't, but who haven't worked in more than three years !   It might never be possible to make the income they once did.  Some of their jobs were outsourced to India, China, or even to Canada.
            My husband and I are nearing a part of our lives when we should be able to put relatively large sums away for retirement. Our kids are moving out, our debts are gone, and yet we cannot.  This week, we received an electricity bill which is not to be believed.  The same is true of the postmistress, our neighbors, and our daughter.  Everyone has received a huge electricity bill !   The scary thing is that we are frugal and make a lot of things we need ourselves.  Can you imagine how strapped for money we would be if we didn't.?