Indeed....but consider that the numbers can be misleading, and in fact, ANY TIME you look at such a large, diverse population as we have in the US (to say nothing of even more populous nations) looking at the whole never really tells the full story.
For example: The cost of living in NYC or most parts of California is DRAMATICALLY higher than where I live, in Columbia SC.
A friend of mine took a job in NYC that paid nearly 100k a year, and he could barely afford to live (the deposit on his Manhattan apartment was $9600....I saw the lease!), and his rent was several thousand a month. Contrast that with the $500 I pay here for my roomy townhouse, and it becomes clear that aggregate numbers do not tell the full story.
A significant portion of SC's population are technically living "below the poverty line" and yet, most folks here get along quite well (because the "poverty line" is just that....an arbitrary line drawn in the sand, whose point is chosen by some government yahoo. Again, since the cost of living is approximately half of what it is in California, for example, it makes the arbitrary "national poverty level" a bit silly (most of the southern states follow in this same pattern....they are among the poorest states in the union, in terms of absolute dollars earned, but then, the cost of living is significantly lower here).
So...do not read too much into the "poverty line" argument. I'm not saying that it is all smoke and mirrors (obviously, it isn't), but there are large areas of this country where living "below the poverty line" still means living quite comfortably!
-=Vel=-
(who was, until VERY recently, technically one of "the poor")
For example: The cost of living in NYC or most parts of California is DRAMATICALLY higher than where I live, in Columbia SC.
A friend of mine took a job in NYC that paid nearly 100k a year, and he could barely afford to live (the deposit on his Manhattan apartment was $9600....I saw the lease!), and his rent was several thousand a month. Contrast that with the $500 I pay here for my roomy townhouse, and it becomes clear that aggregate numbers do not tell the full story.
A significant portion of SC's population are technically living "below the poverty line" and yet, most folks here get along quite well (because the "poverty line" is just that....an arbitrary line drawn in the sand, whose point is chosen by some government yahoo. Again, since the cost of living is approximately half of what it is in California, for example, it makes the arbitrary "national poverty level" a bit silly (most of the southern states follow in this same pattern....they are among the poorest states in the union, in terms of absolute dollars earned, but then, the cost of living is significantly lower here).
So...do not read too much into the "poverty line" argument. I'm not saying that it is all smoke and mirrors (obviously, it isn't), but there are large areas of this country where living "below the poverty line" still means living quite comfortably!
-=Vel=-
(who was, until VERY recently, technically one of "the poor")
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