But any astute person with basic economics understanding will tell you $100,000 ain't what it used to be.
With real inflation around 20% +/- year over year, average house in America costing $400,000, and now interest rates in high single digits, CC rates in the high 20% range, crushing consumer and student loan debts, even people earning 6 figures are struggling. Here is a report that states about 2/3rds of Americans [including 1/2 of those earning greater than $100,000 bracket] are living paycheck-to-paycheck. This was from 2021-2022 figures. The economic outlooks have all gotten materially worse, not better in any metric.
https://thehill.com/changing-americ...rly-half-of-americans-making-100k-are-living/
"Sixty-four percent of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck as of January 2022, the study found — a 3 percent increase from December 2021 and a 12 percent increase from April 2021.
The survey found that among those earning more than 100,000, 48 percent said they were living paycheck to paycheck, an increase from 42 percent in December 2021. The number has increased since May 2021 when 39 percent of six-figure earners said the same.
In fact, the number of those earning between $50,000 and $100,000 who are living paycheck to paycheck is rising.
In May 2021, 53 percent of earners in this financial bracket reported living paycheck to paycheck, compared to 67 percent in January 2022."