Your 25k vs 25 mill video makes me want to call for a revolution! I spoke with my landlord and they told me they price rent as though 2 people or more will live in an apartment. It is absolutely disgusting. Massachusetts, NY, CT, NJ and the Northeast is becoming unlivable. We need 25 an hour not 18 an hour we need major increases in our incomes! If not we need a revolution!
Agreed yet the rest of us halfway around the world live under the same money grubbing rules the greenback demands. The movie Zeitgeist needs to be played on all tv station's.
@@annoneemoose that's still around 6 million americans, more than the population of finland edit: after reading up a tiny bit more it seems like it's ways less, at around a million workers earning minimum wage, which is still enormous but comparatively much smaller
I am curious if he did a bracket on minimum wage, where he qualified for all government subsidies, and extras (I.e. some cellular providers offer free coverage for low income housing) how that would look
I make about 50k a year in Berlin, Germany, which is about 2750 euro a month after tax working as a sales manager. - 650 euros for renting 1,5 rooms flat with electricity and internet - 100 euros for car insurance and gas - 29 euros public transportation (Car in the city is not useful) - 400 euros for good quality food - 150 euros for eating outside - 150 euros for phone, gym and other subscriptions = about 1200 euros left. I can travel, buy cloth, and safe some money and even invest in ETFs. University and healthcare are included (free). Just wanted to give you a perspective from Europe.
We and my wife make $70k combined here in the US. We can save roughly $2k a MONTH by paying attention to our money. Not all Americans are the ‘averages’ he’s talking about in the video.
@@good-tn9sr I'm assuming you're not from Germany and not familiar with our (somewhat unintuitive) way of counting rooms: 1,5 rooms doesn't include bath and a kitchen, those aren't counted, which means it's most likely a bedroom and either a smaller room or a dining area in the kitchen. And knowing Berlin it's probably the latter. Given that they're paying 650€ and an average price of 17€/m² I'd say they're probably living in a ~40m² (430sqft) flat. It's not too spacious but enough for a living alone university student.
The added touch of Johnny's money deducting being the same sound used in Yu-Gi-Oh when the players are losing life points reallly hits home. Thumbs up to the sound engineer/editor.
yep, has has absolutely no business saving only $500/month. have some friends who live in nyc on around $150k/year who are able to save around half of their post-tax income and still live in nyc. in a normal suburb on $100k that should be enough to save at least $2k/month
@@skifast_takechancesNo way. How much is their rent, the rent here in the West Coast is literally 3k for a 2 bedroom apartment, how is that much money enough for 1-2 people.
lol you could easily afford a 50k bmw on $100k per year that’s $900 per month $8,333 - $900 =$7,433 or if you assumed that’s post tax and made $83k per year after tax you’d still have $6k after paying the car pmt
barista was meant to be a job you do while you work toward something better. Your not supposed to live your entire live supporting a family with a job as a barista
The one thing Johnny forgot to include in this amazing video is STUDENT LOANS. 43 million Americans owe on average $32,000 in debt, and that is also a major expense they have to pay monthly. Some of his assumptions for the middle class earners means they naturally will have to go into debt to afford their lives.
@@johnnyharris Right now the video is perfect mirror of Austria. But if you add the debt in the USA - it means Americans are poorer than us here!? This blew my mind!
@@ranx9078 you're right but the difference is the poorest would not be able to pay any tax without the help because they'd be homeless, out of work or dead.
As a non-American, this video taught me a lot about your society. I never realised that paid leave is a 'benefit'. I assumed it'd be a minimum legislative requirement. I feel very fortunate to live in a country where student loans are interest-free (because they're through the government), some healthcare needs are funded by taxes & every worker is entitled to 4 weeks of paid leave.
@dougmacdougall2097 - you're very close. I'm a New Zealander. I think our employment law is very similar to Australia. I don't know how their student loan system works, though.
You already know you're a great storyteller. But Johnny youve outdone yourself. This is exactly what people wanted to know and have contextualized and you did it perfectly
@@johnnyharrisThis seems to be for one-person family with no student loan and no dependent child or parent. Also, one need to spend at least 20$ a day for a bare minimum with skipping meals. How you count it as 10$/day for the first two cases?
Not unheard of price on the high cost of living coastal cities in the US. Sweetgreen is like 16 already, and poke bowl places are like 19. It would have to be a fancier place but yeah
@@seriousbeesDon't Americans have local markets of local farmers? I can buy there enough saldo, vegetables and fruits for about 20-30 euros for the whole week...
@@houseplant1016 Farmers markets exist but they are expensive. 20 to 30 euros could buy enough for a few salads but depending on your veggie consumption you may need more
In Croatia if you earn 5000 € a month (1100 is the average) you can practically live the same lifestyle as your 1,000,000 example. And this is crazy for me to think about.
@@NightNurseMike It's also easier to make another 100 dollars while making another 100 million doesn't happen with labor alone. (labor being something everyone has while the ability to make another 100 million isn't something most people have)
The costs to repair and maintain that Toyota are not tremendous but as the saying goes, "a thousands dollars isn't a lot of money until you owe it." George is one unexpected repair away from being unable to get to work, losing his job, and being unable to make rent. Something a couple of the examples have in common is that they rely on used cars. Public transportation is often marketed as being better for the environment but it is an economic good too. Unexpected repairs can totally derail the lives of hardworking Americans and cost the public money. Public transportation provides a measure of stability which is good for the overall economy.
Exactly this ^ car dependency's externalities don't just stop at the environment, but reach deep into our personal wallets in the form of both higher taxes and personal vehicle expenses
Cities should rethink public transit. How about autonomous driverless minibuses car pooled and ordered by low income folks from their phones which uses AI algorithm to move people around. City buses are so inefficient. Cities should also provide subsidies for E-bike rentals for people like George. Also how about a big bus, equipped with health facilities and with nurses and some doctors going around low income areas of the city to provide free health and dental health care to folks earning below $40k/year.
You just touched on why extended warranty’s are such big business in the US. They part on people who don’t have the savings for a major repair so they pay monthly for a rip-off warranty for peace of mind. Kind of a poverty tax of sorts.
It’s crazy that I was JUST talking to my grandma about this exact topic a few days ago. She kept saying, “I survived off of $75 back in the day.” I broke everything down as if someone just got out of school and made $15/hr, proving they could not afford an apartment where I live.. it’s sad how terrible this country has gotten in the last 20 years. This video really made me appreciate what I have, I don’t have much.. but it would be ignorant for me to say I have nothing compared to $25K a year. Thank you Johnny for making a masterpiece in-regards to explaining how hard it is for MOST Americans to live.
@@ryanlima2267 while that’s definitely true, it was prior to Johnny releasing a video explaining the same topic we discussed. So Johnny must be listening too.
I live in Romania and work in IT. Started with no experience, I now have 3 years, and while I never got promoted, they made an 'Elite team' in our project, with special assignments, and I got chosen for it pretty quick, which came with a salary increase. Currently I earn 9490 lei, but after taxes and medical insurance I am left with about 5480 lei + some meal tickets (coming on a card) in value of 360 lei / month. That is 2088 USD, from which I am left with 1206 USD and 80 USD on the meal card (money I can generally only spend in grocery shops). I am lucky to be providing support in English and German, and the German language brings me 3000 lei out of the total of 9490 lei. People who don't speak a second language (at work we consider English as a first and a must, so in reality a third language) are not as lucky, especially the ones not being part of our elite team. Most colleagues pay rent or mortgage. I still live with my parents, since my other siblings moved out. We do have 3 bedrooms in total, or a total of 5, if needed, during the summers. My parents' pension combined is less than what I make, so I try to also help out with different monthly expenses. I don't go out much, but I still somehow manage to spend quite more than I can imagine. Especially because of unexpected events - like car breaking down, US cousins coming to visit or traveling though Europe and needing me with them, wedding invitations, computer or different devices replacement or (rarely) upgrades, sometimes a game I like, etc. I keep saying I will be trying to save more, but I rarely manage to do it. I hardly imagine how people with lower incomes can make it. Life in Romania isn't cheap, but it's cheaper than in US. US average price for Diesel is now 3.788 USD (I assume per gallon, which is 3.78541178 liters). In Romania we pay 1.66 USD / liter, which is 6.283 / gallon, which is 1.66 times more than you pay, even though we have lower incomes. A trip of about 1800km (1118 miles) costed me last month 270 USD, if I remember correctly. You would've made the same trip with 163 USD. Other than that, services are usually cheaper, prices of some foods and drinks are the same, but restaurants are generally cheaper, considering that one pays partly for the service, not just the food. Sorry for the long story, I just wanted to let you know everyone feels your problems. My mon's pension when she stopped working (16 to 59, she stopped early) is 308 USD (after taxes). After a few more years she might get up to almost 400 USD. My father has just a bit over that.
You missed a major gap in the distance between 100k and 1M that is common in most of the major cities in the US. Also, getting a 50k vehicle on 100k is really really dumb and not common.
I said the same! $100k a year doesn’t buy a luxury BMW AND a luxury condo with $460/montn HOA AND vacation with $300/night hotel and restaurants. That’s a way into lots of debt
Right lol. I noticed a lot of the comparison videos involve spending on materialistic things to the absolute extreme.. I make roughly 36k per year after taxes. now while I could have gotten a $250,000 house, a nice car, and other waste of money toys I decided to get a smaller fixer upper house with more property for $120,000 and keep my decade old dodge ram and get a 83 dusty truck top camper for free instead of spending $500 a month on a new one. Now by just doing that I was able to cut my cost of living by 30% of what a lot of people pay.. So now with the 30% of money I've saved over the past 5 years I've been able to dump $25,000 into my house which increased the value 2.5× of what I got it for this year. It's possible to live the American dream by controlling your spending and proper investment of the money saved.
@@buck-mq3qo what city do you live in where you can buy any house for 120k? That's an absurdly low amount compared to where a large percent of America lives.
I love how he said “frugal” and not “cheap”. My parents used to own a high-end luggage and handbag store and used to tell stories of how some super rich ppl went out of their way to save as much as a few dollars on a handbag. You wouldn’t believe it.
@@jayhillrubis I don't think you can become a multi-millionaire just by being frugal. Maaaybe you can make a very dated argument about eventually being able to afford a house or something, but not true wealth. There may be a correlation, but definitely no causation on this axis.
@@jayhillrubis You're not wrong but being frugal is just 1 aspect of many many more that makes you able to be so obscenely rich, and for many those aspects aren't at all as positive or aspiring as being frugal. The "issue" is systemic, many people who are frugal don't become rich because the incentive structures put in place are so monstrous that those people hold on to their humanity instead of selling it for money. This is especially the case with people who work to keep their family, friends, loved ones and what they believe in above surface in this difficult climate.
@@jayhillrubisnaah its kinda dumb. Beeing smart is not buying that BMW if you are the person earning 100k. Saving a few bucks when you make millions is insignificant.
@@hansklok3564 truth LOL! A whole video about once you reach a disposable income bracket you can just drop all of that extra money in the stock market and allow it to make money 24/7 as long as you have a good fund manager... But please tell me again about how saving a few dollars puts you on the road to become a millionaire. Step one to fixing society's financial issues education... Although millennials, gen Z, and alpha are all starting to figure out that the game is rigged. Too bad it took millennials so long to catch on with the program.
As a kid, the USA seemed like a great place. Big detached houses, green lawns and nice cars. As I get older and learn more about the country, I have more appreciation for Europe. The townhouses, walkable neighborhoods, bike lanes, public transport, affordable healthcare, etc.
Which means you've grown up and now appreciate what is truly valueble. In The Netherlands we have bike lanes even in the poorer neighboorhoods, so no one is condemned to cars and suffering
Yep pretty much. I've only ever liked the idea of living in NYC due to transport, walkable neighbourhoods etc. Always loved LA too but the driving is too much. We tried walking between some famous sites & regularly ran out of pavement randomly lol. And the suburbs generally just depress me, can't even drive to local metro/train station stop. Same with Florida, literally just going from 1 AC room to a AC car to an AC office/supermarket etc. I've seen more people walk around in heat of Dubai due to good links between trams to the bigger metro via shaded pathways. Heat shouldn't be an issue either. I expect so much more from the world leader but then you relaise half the country literally refutes the concept of government/taxes or spending on anything that isn't military....usually the poorest people too. So broken...yet so powerful/sucessful. Weird af
The relationship one has with risk is also totally different. You can have an idea, start up a business, hire a team of people highly talented people to help you build it while you steer the ship, and if it fails, it literally doesn't affect you. At all. (Though that team of highly talented people gets cut loose to figure their lives out.) If it succeeds, you can feel secure in the knowledge that you "worked hard and earned your success". A very different experience from the bottom 99%, who might have amazing ideas, but no time, capital, or risk capacity to do a damn thing about it.
Also the implicit cost of paying people like a security guard just barely enough to survive, making them more susceptible to bribes. A society with increasing income inequality makes bribes easier and cheaper for the rich people to do and more necessary for desperate poor people to accept, like a negative feedback loop, leading to more bribes and more unequal society.
@@EggTamago7 Kind of how kids of really rich people have infinite chances to start businesses because they are being bankrolled by their parents money + their connections and if one of those businesses succeeds the media now claims this kid is "self made". Its so ridiculously aggravating.
This is a great Analysis! $100,000 use to be the ideal income. It’s still a great income but in this economy it’s the equivalent to $65,000/year. A few years ago my employer had to do a cost of living adjustment to our salary. I’m grateful but not all employers can do so.
My God, when you said potatoes as the go-to for 'fresh produce', 2 weeks per year for 'vacations' and sick leave, spending $320 per month for food and not having public transportation options available, I am blessed to live in the EU.
The EU has been crushing it lately. So much so, that you’re making American firms think twice about screwing us over just because your market is so big (Apple switching to USB C comes to mind). thank you!!!!! (Side note, what bothers me about having this discussion with other Americans is that they almost ALWAYS lash out with: ‘Oh America is SO bad - just leave then!’ And it’s like…. They’re missing the point. It’s not that we hate America, it’s just so saddening that we truly could be the best place to live on Earth - we have the human talent, ability and determination to do it. It’s just we have chosen not to….. we’ve opted for the system Johnny outlined in this vid…. And it’s depressing af lol) Anywho enjoy your holiday, healthcare and workers rights :( -a depressed American lol
Yeah... I calculated mine because this video felt kinda stupid? Like the way it works in the US I have ~$1800 left after taxes Rent: $270 laundry, and internet included Electricity: $35 Food: ~$380 Home insurance: $10 I bike to work, because Sweden is bike-friendly And that's it. I have $1105-ish left every month. But I do have some non-essential spendings. I smoke, that's $150 a month I drink beer, I eat out, I have a car, I have Spotify, I have HBO and Disney+ I wash my car twice a month I am still left with like $800 that I save every month America is cooked
It's true, I wouldn't spend the money that way. But many do, and aside from that one, I think he told a pretty common and understandable story for each income bracket.
yeah, I thought his 50k and 100k examples were living beyond their means. Maaaaybe if you lived about 20 years on 100k, you'd have the savings to let loose a little bit like that, otherwise you are just pushing your own self down a few notches for no good reason.
I make about $30k /year and bought a $30k van that I now live out of. That’s the new American dream, bundling both my transportation and housing in one. The unexpected cost is that most parking places cost around $600-800/mo so I’m not really saving any money, unless I want to move everyday, which is expensive on gas and exhausting mentally. But I do own my own home!
The spending in the middle class categories seemed pretty lavish to me as well, but not unrealistic. I know many people that make much more than I do, but live more poorly than me, because of their spending habits. Fifteen years ago, I was making about $40k and I felt like I was rich (granted the housing and car markets were very different at the time but other expenses were comparable). I spent money like I was poor, so I was constantly putting money in the bank and never worried about when my next paycheck would arrive... Live below your means and play the game if you want to climb up to a higher bracket. The system isn't made for you to advance, but it's possible if you do it smart and put in the effort.
@@Den3productions Heya, just wanted to chime in here. You might want to try networking with people in the area and see if someone might have a driveway or piece of land you could rent for a few hundred instead. Can also put up ads on Craigslist and such.
The fact that health insurance costs this much in the US and then the companies get to move the goalposts and deny all kinds of claims is ridiculous...
@@internetceo At least it's mandatory, employer pays half of it and nobody is scared to get picked up by an ambulance because he would need to declare bankruptcy later... :)
I really appreciate you for using chapters in your videos! It really does help me, an annual UA-cam subscriber, out when wanting to get to what I came for and the occasional skipping the sponsorship section. So please keep it up, because viewers like me love watching videos that are structured as a reference guide. Thank you.
I went from making around 35k to 85k in the last 4 years through raises and promotions at my current workplace from a machine operator to a management position. Even THAT feels like a COMPLETELY different reality.
Congratulations to you both! I hope more people at the lower income bands work hard and intentionally to go up the ladder and change their lives instead of waiting for others to fix it for them. Well done!
The trick there is to not spend much more than you were. Obviously decent food and health care that extend your life expectancy and health expectancy are worth paying out for, but so many people double their income and immediately double their expenditure in things like housing and a nicer car when they could have been saving and investing that income. You'll see both reactions in the people around you and you'll see which gives people a better future.
Changed by saving 40k more per year and getting out of the "no money" trap in 3-5 years or spending a lot more each month and staying in the same trap (albeit at a higher level) indefinitely?
I love how "lifestyle creep" is so fundamental in this video. If you are making anywhere between 40-60k a year, this will be a huge thing to master to allow you to save more.
Seriously. If you eventually have the salary of the $100,000/year earner and continue to budget like the $40,000 earner (which, yes, means still driving the crappy Subaru), you will have GENERATIONAL wealth after 10 years of maintaining that lifestyle. Which means if you start making that kind of money at 25, by the time you're 35, you can start living a life that's unrecognizable to the average American, even if you never get a single pay raise. Fully paid off house, new car every three years, high-end speed boat, etc. All it takes is sacrificing for a few years up front, but a lot of people (especially young people) who make that $100,000/year feel like they "deserve" to have extravagant lifestyles immediately, which keeps them from ever attaining financial freedom and becoming truly wealthy.
@@EsotericDichotomyyou need school to tell you that you need to save more and spend less than you earn? The internet is free. “I need to know about interest rates” chill.
Stock investment has always been off the chart, it’s either you’re good at it or worse. It’s better to learn from an expert than venturing into stock market on your own 👌
Higher value investments return more cause companies have more choices with larger sums and they will pay more to get your money. That 100 will easily get 15/20 million return. Can live great life on the returns. Even with 1 million cash invested can still get 100 k a year which is 8500 month for sitting on your ass.
@@rodrigojds It's pretty simple. the S&P 500 for example. If you don't want only a 10% return annually from the S&P 500, you can invest in BRK and get the same returns that warren buffet gets (Approx. 20% per annum)
@@rodrigojds They are both done the same way, the stock market. The problem is the extra $10 can just pay for your meal, while the extra $10 million can pay for hundreds of peoples whole lives.
@@samueljensen9896 Social Security and Medicare taxes are not refunded. George would pay nothing in federal income taxes on his income of $25k. State and local taxes are a question mark. Depends where you life. If George could manage to get some capital gains from stocks (that he bought REALLY cheap and sold high), he would pay NOTHING in taxes on it, up to a total income of $47026.
You're only saying that because your current income can't support it. Once people start making huge sums of money, their entire attitude and outlook changes
@@VinodhBalloutBro6711 I suppose. But I also realize that circumstances can change in a heartbeat. If I lost that huge income all of a sudden and was still on the hook for a huge mortgage, that could be an unwelcomed challenge.
@@JevonMusicGroup This is the thing about the ultra wealthy in this country in recent decades. The amount of expendable income they have and do spend has led to the creation of blossoming cottage industries of eccentric-billionaire-money products, where the correlation between price and value is so completely disassociated from anything tangible and real that it literally is like living in an alternative reality.
After this half hour long, important, well researched piece of journalism I still cannot get over the wooden tub. There are wooden bathtubs?! I want one so bad!
Thank you for making this video. It really hits close to home. As someone who is struggling making about 28k a year, im really scared. I feel like at any moment i can become homeless. I cant even afford to pay my phone bill next month or fix the Air conditioning in my car. Also massively in debt with CCs and student loans. I really hope it makes waves accross our government and politics. Things need to change fast, as everyday i become more and more terrified.
Have you considered the possibility that your fear is what makes you sink more and more into despair? The cure to fear is courage. Only courage can motivate you to overcome your poverty mindset and use your resources (including intellectual) wisely. There are plenty of rags to riches stories. None of them feature "I get more and more terrified" but rather "i was terrified but I did something about it". All you're doing is watching UA-cam in hopes that someone else will save you.
I make over 200k a year but still driving a 1999 Isuzu with no AC. I pay off my credit cards balance at the end of the month and my student loan within 5 years of graduation. Yet, people making less than 30k a year are spending their money on things they can live without and racking up debts while blaming their society for their self inflicted problems 🤦🏼♂️
@@mercury2cim not no “grandpa” im literally 23, and he is right. Spend less or make more. Crying in ur bathroom abt how the “gov fkd u up” instead of working more and leaening skillsets to get you out of there is your fault. Go make more! Or go spend less
I come from switzerland and am 33 and earn gross 7000 swiss francs a year which is about 8250 dollars, of which I have net 6200 Car: Audi A4 with bezin insurance = 300 Rent: 3 room apartment with garden in a small town = 1250 Taxes: every month = 800 Health insurance and additional insurance = 450 Furniture insurance, legal protection = 50 Electricity, water = 50 Internet, cell phone, netflix = 60 Food: And only buy bio = 500 I have left over at the end of the month = 2740 Partying, eating out = 700 The rest I save every month = 2000
Its a bit weird though. Because it doesnt show the standard of living decay. The 100k guy is like a lower middle class guy in the 80s. And hes the top 10% of earners. The movie vacation has the main character doing better than him. Not only that but hes alone as well. The million dollar guy is more like the 100k guy back then. Its gotten extremely bad period. Like we were past the tipping point in the 90s. People were arguing for $15 mininum wage back then. Most people are living in poverty period. 77% of families need more money just to live.
One main thing I noticed in your video is that all this characters are alone. No parents, no girlfriend/wife, no kids. No family. And they should be included in this study as they affect this characters both positively and negatively
I was about to say the same thing. Ive had a kid and in a relationship in the last 3 years and my costs have risen by about 45k a year. Families are expensive, no wonder way less people are having kids
Even with family support. Most likely their family is one accident away from homelessness too :( Tbh, it’s actually a positive for society. It’s really messed up that the 1% gets all the gold, but they are also statistically the most depressed , have kids that overdose , are married multiple times and have lousy relationships, have no real sense of purpose, and die lonely. Meanwhile, the “poor” family has a strong bond, good relationships, give their last dime to help each other, and die surrounded by family and friends :)
Can confirm. Somehow dug myself out of homelessness after AI took my career for a minute there (artist and designer). It was a terrifying moment in my life to go from $80k a year to $25k. Luckily I can already see that AI art is being rejected by many now, so my career is turning around again.
@@stevrgrs It reminds me of how some of the very wealthy need special therapists who specialize in the exclusive problems they have to deal with. "Does this person actually like me, or are they just using me?", and that thought would drive me crazy, but only answerable if they lose most of their money. They probably don't spend much time with their family either because they are more focused on their company/companies and/or political influence.
I make a little less than $25k a year and I'm still living with my mother at 28. What you said is very true. A couple months ago in May I got a really bad sprain in my left wrist and I've been on light duty at my job ever since (I work as a ramp agent for a major airline). I work part-time on paper, but I used to work between 60-80 hours bi-weekly, making $19.17/hr (now its $19.72/hr after my yearly pay rise :) ). Since I'm on light duty I'm prohibited from picking up hours and I have to work my base hours. I was able to go half with my mother on rent and even paid for her car insurance/phone bill from time to time, but for the last 3 months its been rough. I have to do Uber Eats after work to not only maintain the going half on rent agreement, but to stay alive. I've got a car note, debt, phone, utilities, etc. that I also pay for and after 2 days of receiving my paycheck, I'm in the negatives. Its very disheartening and its made my depression way worse than it already was. I also have diabetes and its important for me to keep up with my doctors. Haven't discussed my diabetes since a day after I reported my injury, which has been 3 months and I'm supposed to meet with my doctors monthly. I haven't been able to relax as I'm always thinking about how I'm going to survive tomorrow and making sure I've got enough gas to make it work. Because I'm relying on my car for a passive income, I'm spending a lot more on gas, as I have to fill it up every 2 days. Its very true that the already shaky wheels do go falling off after something like a simple injury essentially makes you borderline homeless in this country.
Correction: It takes courage to talk about this and make the statements that he made in the end (e.g. raising taxes on the rich) At least in the current US political sphere
Imagine being under that $25,000 a year bracket. I'm permanently disabled and my income is based on whatever social security I paid in while I was able to work. I was making $72,000 a year before I became disabled at age 37. So, I make about $18,000 a year from that. Yes, I do qualify for Medicare and it is helpful, but I still have to pay a monthly premium out of my social security check and copays. And anything medicare doesn't cover is out of pocket. The whole reason I cannot work is because of my health issues. I _need_ to see doctors and get prescriptions filled every month. But, I am extremely lucky. I inherited a house from my grandmother that is paid for. If I didn't inherit a paid off house, I have no idea how I would survive. And even with not having a mortgage or rent, I still have to pay yearly property taxes, home owners insurance, and maintenance on the house. I pay someone to cut my grass and I have a general contractor that I call if the pump breaks down or the dishwasher stops working. Last year, my septic system needed to be pumped. I am still making payments on that. I'm not sure where I'm going to get the $2200 I'm going to own on property taxes next year. I'm seriously considering renting out my spare room to a stranger. The whole reason I cannot work is my health but it's my health care costs that make me wish I had a job.
I have been blind all my life but pretty able to work.. until I was fired a year ago and had to move down with my parents who now live in a rural-ish area. I've applied for SSDI, but they're getting older and the house isn't paid off.. they're consistently like "it'll be fine"... They don't seem to get it. I am fortunate to have my parents, I know.. but man is it mentally rough.
Yep. Working at Kroger, at $15/hr, still has me having nothing for lunch, because the few items I would buy doubled in price, and my breakfast is the $2.10 dozen of leftover donuts whenever I can get them. Which leaves lunchmeat sandwiches for dinner. Makes me feel great looking at our store manager, the guy who makes $200k a year with $32k quarterly bonuses, and nobody knows what he does. He and his managers don't hesitate to punish us for the slightest bit of relaxing on the job, meanwhile they get six figures to stand around on their phones, sit in their office and chat, not follow schedules, screw with and screw up timesheets, and demand workers to work days they said they couldn't.
Well my friend we all start somewhere usually at the bottom of the food chain and at the end of the dwy he is your boss , such a high paying job doesn't come by being a good worker but he probably went to university and got a masters degree or a diploma in business management. We shouldn't be angry with what others are earning they live there lives how they want to we are all entitled to that, don't forget those managers were in your shoes once upon a time they probably got the same treatment maybe they testing you see how you would react, don't react be better make more sales got to university and become thier boss.. I hope this wasn't a harsh thing to say I'd rather not feel sorry for you but uplift you :)
Here in Perth Western Australia we have our 3 major shopping centres Coles, Woolworths and IGA. Woolworths ceo alone was making around 8.6mil a year and a store manager would make around 110k per year where as an average employee would make around 56k a year. So what am I trying to say is that we all start somewhere and if you want that luxury lifestyle have to work hard to get it, only 1% of people will be successful most will give up before they even start thats life gets to hard so we switch to what's comfortable for us
@@ArthoireI think that he needs to listen to his boss's do what he's told coz from im reading he's just standard employeeim not saying this in a nasty way either it's just as I stated in my other comments you gotta work hard to get that life and only 1% make it anything is possible tjrough sheer determination be the lappy do whatever they say and you yourself will climb that ladder go to school gets your masters ya know what mean these jobs aren't given lightly but to people who have experience and certificates They can boss you around coz thier the boss if people don't like it then they can quit thier job but that wouldn't be smart lose your only source of income hard enough finding a new job these days. Anyways back to the point if he's on his breaks then they shouldn't have the right by law to ask him to work thats highly illegal and can be charged coz your entitled to your 2 breaks a dayt if he relaxing while on the clock the they do have the right to give you a hard time coz its like what am I paying you for scenario no boss likes to see workers relaxing while on the clock that's just fact
An interesting twist on this format might have been to frame it as 4 people in 4 income brackets who are all employed by the top "earner". George is the landscaper at Robert's mansion, Simon is Robert's private driver, Tim is Robert's private doctor, and Noah is Robert's dinner guest or something like that. The trickle down people want to show you how Robert is creating this ecosystem for all the little fish to live in underneath him but the illusion of upward mobility means those little fish never really stand a chance at swimming any higher in the pond.
You nailed it. I'm trying to start my own business, but in order to make it real I need capital. I make beyond Tim money, but to make Noah and beyond money, the bank wants me to to use our family home as collateral. I can't risk that no matter how good my start-up is. And before you say "find a private investor!"... 8 out of 10 Angel investing setups are total scams.
A friend of mine just sold his landscape business he started in highschool ... for 1.4 million. Everyone can move up in America, you just have to be smart enough to do it.
Dumb. Most who are rich started out with low wages. America has best upward mobility of any country. If you work, you can easily rise out of poverty. If you want to game all day and spend your money on sneakers and vape, then you will always be a poor loser.
@@fareshajjar1208 lol bro i work hard not everyone has to be a ceo in this life. It’s just funny how older generations were able to work a trade by a house and raise a family but now my generation can’t do the same.
For metropolitan/HCOL areas, I'd say that it would take $100k to afford the lifestyle illustrated in the backdrop that currently is dedicated for the $25k lifestyle.
I like how you accentuated the ridiculousness of different scenarios without spiraling into judgement. "this is the way it is, and this is what than means."
I think the one thing that works the opposite is Hotels - the more you pay the less you get for free. Holiday inn Express - free buffet every morning. Ritz Carlton - no free buffet, you have to pay for room service, which is astronomical in cost.
@@Synoopy2 sure, but the room service is going to be lobster and steak. Not saying it's a good value, but you're paying for more expensive food than just Belgian waffles and scambled eggs. (although those free continental breakfasts fucking HIT)
I know this is a serious video but I’m obsessed with Johnny’s rich boy Robert persona, specifically when he remembers that he needs to buy his Italy house so he needs to get something more modest 😂
Recessions are part of the economic cycle, all you can do is make sure you're prepared and plan accordingly. I graduated into a recession (2009). My 1st job after college was aerial acrobat on cruise ships. Today I'm a VP at a global company, own 3 rental properties, invest in stocks and biz, built my own business, and have my net worth increase by $500k in the last 4 years.
It's a decent wage by anyone's standards. Problem is housing economy then. Well, Johnny Harris managed to find a crack den in some suburbs for 750 a month, perhaps you could too?
A formally EU buddy I have at work and I figured out the "tax rate" comparison. It's basically the same but the employer takes the healthcare part, property taxes, gas taxes, sales tax. It all adds up over here in the U.S of A to where it's basically the same. We just don't get as much vacation and the health care is bismal for those that make too much to qualify for Medicaid and too little to be with an employer that provides a group funded policy.
Stop spending money on clothes and irrelevant crap. I make a great six figure living and I canceled my Netflix subscription because it went over $14. That’s the difference between those of us with money and those of us without. Decision making is a big deal.
One of the best parts about this video is getting to see everyone’s comments on their place on the chart and peer into the accuracy of what JH was talking about
Samuel Robson Walton's Ferrari 250 GTO costs about $120 Million. His mechanic makes Home visits too. He pays ZERO in taxes, but abhors having to provide benefits for his employees.
@@agus.lorenzo Cause a lot of his wealth is tied up in stock, they never or rarely sell , instead they take out loans with stock as collateral & live off that. Banks know they're good forit & they can just pay it off via stock. Equally he inherited his wealth so will naturally have countless private wealth that was only taxed once decades ago. If you want something big or fancy the company can buy or pay for it via offshore firms, be it a private jet, a NFL team, a new house, the expenses of your employees/secuity etc. We have same thing in the UK where one of the largest land owners who is nobelty & a lord is worth billions but never pays anything in taxes. Simmilar to the king/queen. It's old wealth, you hang on to it to avoid capital gains tax & inheritance tax is literally only for the upper middle class to pay who don't have lawyers to avoid it.
@@d.b.cooper1 So I guess the interest rate on the loans taken out with stocks used as collateral is cheaper than them having to deal with income tax/capital gains tax?
@ButteredPecan17 exactly. They get insanely low interest rates because for the bank, the loan is not a huge risk - like Johnny said, "they know he's good for it." Plus, when he goes to pay back the loan, he can just pay it off from his profits on other investments. When you're that next-level wealthy, your money makes you more money (that "passive income" that alpha bro shills love so much) so you want to keep as much of it "working for you" as possible. So by the end of it, you've "spent" 15 million dollars in living expenses, but you haven't lost a cent of your wealth doing so - and in fact probably grew your pile even bigger in the meantime!
Wow! Im from Russia, and 25000$ in year is our upper middle class, that have their own house/apartment, car, commercial medicine etc. The average salary in Moscow is about 1700$/month after all taxes. Poor people, who lives for 150-200$ per month spends more than 50% for food. Most people have their own apartments. Thats afgordable and because of compact living and good public transport, you can live in cheap "sleeping area" and still have access for all infrastricure in the city. But the main problem for our country is income stratification as well
I wasn't financial free until my 40's and I'm still in my 40's, bought my third house already, earn I'm in a monthly through passive income, and i got 4 out of 5 goals, just hope it encourages someone here. that it doesn't matter if you don't have any of them right now, you can start Today's regardless your age to Invest and change your future! Investing in the financial market is a grand choice I made.
What impresses me most about Jason. is how well He explains basic concept of winning before actually letting you use his tradein signals. This goes a long way to ensure winningtrades
Poor: Trade time for money Rich: Trade money for time. Time is worth more than money. Some people think time is worthless. Some people realize it's the only thing that matters.
Loved this video. I do wish he included a segment in which he added the cost of having kids/costs of having a family, because that’s a huge factor in many Americans day to day.
one of your best videos yet man! it doesn't have that intensity and sense of urgency that most of your videos do, which are also very good of course. but this one has a more relaxed approach which can be refreshing at times. that being said the edit and the care with all the little details is top level as usual. good job!
@@user-sw7od4yg7n right I learned back in 2010 that buying was insanely cheaper than renting even back then in the middle east coast. Couldn't imagine how much rent is now
You see these viral posts of receipts every year from clubs/resturants in London, Monaco, Dubai to Vegas. Truly mind boggling. Even wilder is just how many people follow those insta accounts & suck up to the people.
I think this video put things into perspective for me more than any other finance video I’ve watched. It’s crazy just how hard life can be for some people, and just how much more you can do if you earn more. Great video, subbed
Told me don't make bad decisions. Be a mechanic, plumber, electrician and skip the womens studies. My question is why are so many adults people over 25 or 30 making so little money?
@@arthurkineard7356The reason: Financial Literacy. So few people know anything about making money let alone growing that money. I know people in every income bracket the video showed and it ALL boils down to that. This is why you see some dumb or lazy people make more money than doctors or lawyers. They’re more financially literate. Robert kiyosaki’s books explain this in detail.
@@Erick_Vazquez Thanks for the Book recommendation, if it'll really help me understand how to make better monetary decisions, then I'll buy it as soon as you can❤
I'd love to see a part two to this where Johnny goes and documents people who actually live in these lifestyles. The stats are fun, but I bet the real-world experiences are pretty eye opening.
That grey area where you earn "too much" to qualify for state aid, but not enough to live, is killer. I say this as someone who lives in a state where $7.25 is still the minimum wage.
It’s like “get 20% discount when spend more than 100$ on electric” and those affordable one are 49,50$ so you’re forced to buy 3 instead of 2 or buy the more expensive one which is 80$ or something.
I live in NYC, and I lived in the $25-$45k income range for most of my 20s. Not an easy task in NYC, especially when you don't have the right work papers. Life was so much more stressful, especially when I dropped into the $25-30k range. Every decision I made related to money was a cause for stress, even trips to the grocery store. Forget eating out, dinners out with friends, the movies. I was stretched so thin all the time, and after a decade, it wore me down so much I'm sure it took years off my life. Now in my 30s and a permanent resident, I make about $70k a year, and life is so much easier. It's like a giant boulder was taken off my back. I still run a tight budget because I know the hard times are closer than you think, but life literally started to have more color. I can't spend like crazy, of course, but I can now do little things like eat out occasionally, buy my friend a drink, or just get a new pair of shoes.
When I was in my twenties, there were some months where I had an Excel sheet to track expenses, so I knew how much I could spend and not go broke. Now I finished my studies and that seems like a completely different life to me
You work for 40yrs to have $1m in your retirement, Meanwhile some people are putting just $10k in a meme coin for just few months and now they are multi millionaires. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life
After I raised up to 325k trading with her I bought a new House and a car here in the states 🇺🇸🇺🇸also paid for my son's surgery (Oscar). Glory to God.shalom..😊
Trading without professional guide... Huh I laugh you, because you will remain where you are or even make huge losses that will stop you from trading, this has been one of the biggest problem to new traders
that $25k life is so true.. so relatable. i spent on house repairs, so no money for food for a month and before that i had a health emergency so, it's been horrible.
@@ahaviahbessemer9844 I'm more curious how they are buying a house they can't afford. But yeah, are they eating or just going on a fast or being hyperbolic?
This is so depressing. For many years, I have thought, that the U.S. is a paradise for almost everyone. Now, as I delve deeper and deeper the actual, underlying reailty, it scares me. As a European, I wish the every U.S. citizen a better world and a better country (ragarding average life).
There's a lot of poverty in Europe as well, thankfully we have a social security net in most countries, but we still have growing inequality here too. And once you're trapped in social security dependency it's very hard to get out of it.
Thanks for the well wishings. I don’t think any of us are holding our breath waiting for official relief anytime soon though. You could argue that things are working as designed.
@user-kbascd4o24 How does the culture promote infertility? Our culture celebrate parenthood, we spend a lot of budgets on education and social welfare. Problem is inequality when the Rich keeps higher % of GDP there is less money for poor and middleclass to have children so we get negative fertility rate. This is global problem, they have same problem in South Korea. Inequality promotes infertility, not whatever vague cultural thing you are referring too.
I have been in the 25k, 40k, 60k, 100k, now 250k a year. Let me tell you for those that say money doesn’t buy happiness doesn’t know what it’s like to be poor. I literally have zero financial worries. Never look at the price of groceries, spending $300 on dinner doesn’t matter. Keep grinding everyone it will get better.
I went from 50k to 105k within a year. It’s really nice to not have to worry about being able to pay the oil bill or having to live on ramen until your next paycheck. I think those people really mean to say money isn’t the key to happiness. It helps a lot but it’s more about having good friends and family around you.
@@golamas1999 I agree completely. But to me it brings happiness not having to worry about those little things that used to bring stress and anxiety to the picture, having to count every single dollar.
The jump from 100K to 1M is wild to me. Should do this for a family of 4 Edit: I also find it interesting that the most replayed spot on this video is at 40K a year
You add a wife and you better be making double for the same lifestyle. Yes you share a home. But she's gonna spend you down as much as you let her. Yes this means a couple at the 25k bracket needs roommates still. The reality is that both of the couple work and contribute, so you have 2 people making 25k each and you just barely make it. EDIT: Add a kid and a 25k couple might as well die.
This was scarily accurate for the 40k and 100k brackets - the mortgage for the 100k was spot on ($2300 before any HOA), and the “can get by but doesn’t really have any extra money” for the $40k
Choices. That 40-100k earner can live in the the same place they did as a student (unless it was their parents basement). There is no rule that says you are entitled to an overpriced house and overpriced car because you earn a certain amount. People have lifestyle creep that advances faster than their earning potential. I have played that game, it is mostly self imposed limitations.
@@Miner-dyne Yea but none of these examples have children. Imagine raising a child in a 1 bdr apartment. I agree it isn't perfect, but it shows what is a reality for many.
You missed a trick for the mortgage at the $25 million bracket, which highlights how broken the system is. Because you have so much money, a bank will loan you the $15 million at a low interest rate because they know you're good for the money. You can then use that loan to invest in the stock market, which, even at a low-risk investment strategy, will have a higher return than the bank's interest rate over the time you repay the mortgage. So you make more money and have a $15 million asset when everything is said and done.
That's basically what you do with any kind of high net value asset, including stocks. Another thing I learned while workinh in finance is the bank would give basically close to 0% interest loans to high networth individuals as long as they kept a balance in their account (because the bank would turn around and invest that money and give them back some of the earned gains, keep the rest for themselves). Money's funny like that, the more you have the less expensive things actually get ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I used to sell luxury appliances. Some of my clients had two kitchens in their home. A show kitchen with Sub-Zero/Wolf / Viking / Miele appliances and a "dirty" kitchen in the back that they actually used (typically with higher end appliances like Bosch/KitchenAid). These show kitchens are what you see in these multimillion dollar homes.
Fascinating, as someone who likes to cook, i always thought of a kitchen as a working space, not a status symbol. Were the appliances better in the "dirty" kitchen, or did the clients not know about such lowly matters?
I live in US city with one kid. My take home has been about $4000 a month for years. 1-bedroom, few bills and rental/car insurance are total of $2500 right now. We are doing well, because health insurance is covered by work, we have free parking, free pool, free gym, utilities included, free food at work, take food home, take the kid to work if needed, short commute. For the last twenty years I was able to invest about $500 a month. At some point the investments are giving me the $4000 a month. What really happened is that I also learned to trade and get great returns on small amounts. Small amounts allow for greater return.
Many do but then throw in marriage, kids, saving for their future etc. Along with general social pressures that force people to keep up with the jone's whether you want to or not e.g. weddings, holidays, events etc. So many people who make $100-$250k often come across like they're the most pressed out of anyone...and many do literally live paycheck to paycheck.
@@d.b.cooper1 I have never gave a crap about buying expensive things, just because people like them or would potentially like me more... Since I became a software engineer the only thing that has inflated in my life is that now I pay rent, because of course and I go out 2 more times a month than I used to.
@@d.b.cooper1If someone can’t afford kids, they shouldn’t have them. No one’s forcing you to keep up with the Jones’. My husband & I both made about $50k/yr each back when we got married. We spent $10k on our wedding.
@@karenwillough180 I was just explaining the situation of an average person. “Can’t afford to have kids” is such a weird subjective thing to say as by that logic if those on 6 figures can’t then how could those on $30k? You make it work. It’s just part of life. I was merely explaining how those on 6 figures often can end up living pay check to check. It wasn’t some personal attack on you lol. Most people do want to start a family & enjoy life while they can.
Thanks for watching! Make sure to also check out our most recent video on Kurdistan: ua-cam.com/video/H3VvJRKZFHc/v-deo.htmlsi=2l6vGYlB0Lu8g3K4
Your 25k vs 25 mill video makes me want to call for a revolution! I spoke with my landlord and they told me they price rent as though 2 people or more will live in an apartment. It is absolutely disgusting. Massachusetts, NY, CT, NJ and the Northeast is becoming unlivable. We need 25 an hour not 18 an hour we need major increases in our incomes! If not we need a revolution!
Please make video about the protest in Bangladesh.
You highlighted the wrong category at 8:37. Is the figure still correct?
This income comparison is one of my favourites - even as Swiss Simon version 😃
This is just as applicable to Europe, You really make some good videos😄
$7.25 minimum wage especially for a country that doesn't have universal healthcare is absolutely pathetic.
Less than 2% of Americans earn minimum wage. The other 98% make more.
Agreed yet the rest of us halfway around the world live under the same money grubbing rules the greenback demands. The movie Zeitgeist needs to be played on all tv station's.
@annoneemoose, you say that like it's not 6.6million people.
@@annoneemoose that's still around 6 million americans, more than the population of finland
edit: after reading up a tiny bit more it seems like it's ways less, at around a million workers earning minimum wage, which is still enormous but comparatively much smaller
I am curious if he did a bracket on minimum wage, where he qualified for all government subsidies, and extras (I.e. some cellular providers offer free coverage for low income housing) how that would look
I make about 50k a year in Berlin, Germany, which is about 2750 euro a month after tax working as a sales manager.
- 650 euros for renting 1,5 rooms flat with electricity and internet
- 100 euros for car insurance and gas
- 29 euros public transportation (Car in the city is not useful)
- 400 euros for good quality food
- 150 euros for eating outside
- 150 euros for phone, gym and other subscriptions
= about 1200 euros left.
I can travel, buy cloth, and safe some money and even invest in ETFs. University and healthcare are included (free).
Just wanted to give you a perspective from Europe.
The 1.5 room is the trick you are doing here, good for you, very rational
I am the same, i have 1 room all included for 300eur in western europe
you’re living in a shoebox, that’s the difference my friend, though that’s what i would do as well lol
you damn socialists you /s
We and my wife make $70k combined here in the US. We can save roughly $2k a MONTH by paying attention to our money. Not all Americans are the ‘averages’ he’s talking about in the video.
@@good-tn9sr I'm assuming you're not from Germany and not familiar with our (somewhat unintuitive) way of counting rooms: 1,5 rooms doesn't include bath and a kitchen, those aren't counted, which means it's most likely a bedroom and either a smaller room or a dining area in the kitchen. And knowing Berlin it's probably the latter. Given that they're paying 650€ and an average price of 17€/m² I'd say they're probably living in a ~40m² (430sqft) flat. It's not too spacious but enough for a living alone university student.
The added touch of Johnny's money deducting being the same sound used in Yu-Gi-Oh when the players are losing life points reallly hits home. Thumbs up to the sound engineer/editor.
I am happy to know I wasn’t the only person to instantly recognize it.
I was about to point that out I am an avid yugioh player
It sounds beautiful. The instant nostalgia gawd damn.
In the last video they used the Navigating-Sounds of the Nintendo Switch and it kept me confused for half the video until I realized.
Literally so happy I'm not the only one on this haha :)
The guy making 100k a year has no business financing a 50k BMW.
yep, has has absolutely no business saving only $500/month. have some friends who live in nyc on around $150k/year who are able to save around half of their post-tax income and still live in nyc. in a normal suburb on $100k that should be enough to save at least $2k/month
@@skifast_takechancesNo way. How much is their rent, the rent here in the West Coast is literally 3k for a 2 bedroom apartment, how is that much money enough for 1-2 people.
lol you could easily afford a 50k bmw on $100k per year that’s $900 per month $8,333 - $900 =$7,433 or if you assumed that’s post tax and made $83k per year after tax you’d still have $6k after paying the car pmt
@@Awc198 Oh I wish my tax was so low
@@sxchen1268 $6k is based on a 25% and marginal tax rate of 34.5%
If your barista cannot afford to live near the cafe, then it's not really a city, it's an amusement park.
Damn😟. Your right.
Pretty much a city run by slaves for the rich to play in
barista was meant to be a job you do while you work toward something better. Your not supposed to live your entire live supporting a family with a job as a barista
@@shipit1timeplz517no, but they should be able to live a simple life while they're getting started
@@shipit1timeplz517that’s the point!
The job is so insignificant you might as well not work it.
It’s like putting a bandaid on a tumor.
The one thing Johnny forgot to include in this amazing video is STUDENT LOANS. 43 million Americans owe on average $32,000 in debt, and that is also a major expense they have to pay monthly. Some of his assumptions for the middle class earners means they naturally will have to go into debt to afford their lives.
For the win!
majority of those with student loans follow studies that are completely useless. like sociology studies and stuff like that.
Ohh yeah I should have included that!
@@johnnyharris Right now the video is perfect mirror of Austria. But if you add the debt in the USA - it means Americans are poorer than us here!? This blew my mind!
Most don't have student loans
Somebody once told me “It costs you more to be poor.” 🤯
No it costs you more to be middle class. Poorest get things for free
@@ranx9078 no they don't. that's why there is so much debt trying to stay afloat.
@@NoctLucisCaelum dude middle class does not get any benefits and pay the most tax.
@@ranx9078 you're right but the difference is the poorest would not be able to pay any tax without the help because they'd be homeless, out of work or dead.
@@dns-n8u well, I have seen people in California with 6 kids and making 20k a year getting free healthcare and 5000 additional cash a month…
As a non-American, this video taught me a lot about your society. I never realised that paid leave is a 'benefit'. I assumed it'd be a minimum legislative requirement. I feel very fortunate to live in a country where student loans are interest-free (because they're through the government), some healthcare needs are funded by taxes & every worker is entitled to 4 weeks of paid leave.
where do you live
Which country is that?!
I’m going to guess this person is talking about Australia
@dougmacdougall2097 - you're very close. I'm a New Zealander. I think our employment law is very similar to Australia. I don't know how their student loan system works, though.
Yes tell others to go where you live. We're so glad you are fortunate. The US is full, please go.
You already know you're a great storyteller. But Johnny youve outdone yourself. This is exactly what people wanted to know and have contextualized and you did it perfectly
Wow what a generous comment. This applies to my incredible team too. They make so much of this come to life. I’ll pass this along ❤
He did it Mr Beast Style ;D and yes, did well.
@@johnnyharrisThis seems to be for one-person family with no student loan and no dependent child or parent. Also, one need to spend at least 20$ a day for a bare minimum with skipping meals. How you count it as 10$/day for the first two cases?
@@Boxels well uh mrbeast fakes his video plus manipulates his fans sooo no but he did an amazing job.
+
This is why I love UA-cam. I hope this video makes the front page and stays there.
Promote promote promote!,
@@PaulBilly bidenomics is working, eh?
@@zoanth4Obviously those Trump tax cuts have done wonders
@mr12aT they did help, it raised wages and corporate profits which everyone benefitted from until covid and biden wrecked it all
@@zoanth4 😂 you’re a comedian
"I get to spend 25 dollars on a Salad" This sentence will live rent free in my head for years. I hate it.
Yeah, who eats salad?!
"You’ve accidentally given me the food that my food eats."
Bruh. That's alot just on a salad.
Not unheard of price on the high cost of living coastal cities in the US. Sweetgreen is like 16 already, and poke bowl places are like 19. It would have to be a fancier place but yeah
@@seriousbeesDon't Americans have local markets of local farmers? I can buy there enough saldo, vegetables and fruits for about 20-30 euros for the whole week...
@@houseplant1016 Farmers markets exist but they are expensive. 20 to 30 euros could buy enough for a few salads but depending on your veggie consumption you may need more
In Croatia if you earn 5000 € a month (1100 is the average) you can practically live the same lifestyle as your 1,000,000 example. And this is crazy for me to think about.
"To turn $100 into $110 is work. To turn $100 million into $110 million is inevitable." - edgar bronfman, ceo of Seagram
Or just put it in a cd for 2 years.
It’s easier to lock up your money if you have millions to spare but when you’re dealing with 100 it’s a struggle
@@NightNurseMike It's also easier to make another 100 dollars while making another 100 million doesn't happen with labor alone. (labor being something everyone has while the ability to make another 100 million isn't something most people have)
@@NightNurseMike Better learn to code because robots will do most labor in 20 years...
@@ProudAmericanAmerican gpt already halved coding jobs, no?
The costs to repair and maintain that Toyota are not tremendous but as the saying goes, "a thousands dollars isn't a lot of money until you owe it." George is one unexpected repair away from being unable to get to work, losing his job, and being unable to make rent. Something a couple of the examples have in common is that they rely on used cars. Public transportation is often marketed as being better for the environment but it is an economic good too. Unexpected repairs can totally derail the lives of hardworking Americans and cost the public money. Public transportation provides a measure of stability which is good for the overall economy.
Also, good luck if you have to raise a kid.
Exactly this ^ car dependency's externalities don't just stop at the environment, but reach deep into our personal wallets in the form of both higher taxes and personal vehicle expenses
Cities should rethink public transit. How about autonomous driverless minibuses car pooled and ordered by low income folks from their phones which uses AI algorithm to move people around. City buses are so inefficient. Cities should also provide subsidies for E-bike rentals for people like George. Also how about a big bus, equipped with health facilities and with nurses and some doctors going around low income areas of the city to provide free health and dental health care to folks earning below $40k/year.
If only the AC was broken I could still drive it
You just touched on why extended warranty’s are such big business in the US. They part on people who don’t have the savings for a major repair so they pay monthly for a rip-off warranty for peace of mind. Kind of a poverty tax of sorts.
It’s crazy that I was JUST talking to my grandma about this exact topic a few days ago. She kept saying, “I survived off of $75 back in the day.” I broke everything down as if someone just got out of school and made $15/hr, proving they could not afford an apartment where I live.. it’s sad how terrible this country has gotten in the last 20 years. This video really made me appreciate what I have, I don’t have much.. but it would be ignorant for me to say I have nothing compared to $25K a year. Thank you Johnny for making a masterpiece in-regards to explaining how hard it is for MOST Americans to live.
Your phone is listening you
@@ryanlima2267 while that’s definitely true, it was prior to Johnny releasing a video explaining the same topic we discussed. So Johnny must be listening too.
@@NightmaresBTWjohnny is always listening.👂
I live in Romania and work in IT. Started with no experience, I now have 3 years, and while I never got promoted, they made an 'Elite team' in our project, with special assignments, and I got chosen for it pretty quick, which came with a salary increase.
Currently I earn 9490 lei, but after taxes and medical insurance I am left with about 5480 lei + some meal tickets (coming on a card) in value of 360 lei / month.
That is 2088 USD, from which I am left with 1206 USD and 80 USD on the meal card (money I can generally only spend in grocery shops).
I am lucky to be providing support in English and German, and the German language brings me 3000 lei out of the total of 9490 lei. People who don't speak a second language (at work we consider English as a first and a must, so in reality a third language) are not as lucky, especially the ones not being part of our elite team.
Most colleagues pay rent or mortgage. I still live with my parents, since my other siblings moved out. We do have 3 bedrooms in total, or a total of 5, if needed, during the summers.
My parents' pension combined is less than what I make, so I try to also help out with different monthly expenses.
I don't go out much, but I still somehow manage to spend quite more than I can imagine. Especially because of unexpected events - like car breaking down, US cousins coming to visit or traveling though Europe and needing me with them, wedding invitations, computer or different devices replacement or (rarely) upgrades, sometimes a game I like, etc.
I keep saying I will be trying to save more, but I rarely manage to do it. I hardly imagine how people with lower incomes can make it.
Life in Romania isn't cheap, but it's cheaper than in US.
US average price for Diesel is now 3.788 USD (I assume per gallon, which is 3.78541178 liters). In Romania we pay 1.66 USD / liter, which is 6.283 / gallon, which is 1.66 times more than you pay, even though we have lower incomes.
A trip of about 1800km (1118 miles) costed me last month 270 USD, if I remember correctly. You would've made the same trip with 163 USD. Other than that, services are usually cheaper, prices of some foods and drinks are the same, but restaurants are generally cheaper, considering that one pays partly for the service, not just the food.
Sorry for the long story, I just wanted to let you know everyone feels your problems. My mon's pension when she stopped working (16 to 59, she stopped early) is 308 USD (after taxes). After a few more years she might get up to almost 400 USD. My father has just a bit over that.
@AbelSorin Thank you for sharing.
You missed a major gap in the distance between 100k and 1M that is common in most of the major cities in the US. Also, getting a 50k vehicle on 100k is really really dumb and not common.
Yeah I agree 😂😂😂
I said the same! $100k a year doesn’t buy a luxury BMW AND a luxury condo with $460/montn HOA AND vacation with $300/night hotel and restaurants. That’s a way into lots of debt
Things like BMWs are why so many people who make a good income, still have a low networth.
Right lol. I noticed a lot of the comparison videos involve spending on materialistic things to the absolute extreme.. I make roughly 36k per year after taxes. now while I could have gotten a $250,000 house, a nice car, and other waste of money toys I decided to get a smaller fixer upper house with more property for $120,000 and keep my decade old dodge ram and get a 83 dusty truck top camper for free instead of spending $500 a month on a new one. Now by just doing that I was able to cut my cost of living by 30% of what a lot of people pay.. So now with the 30% of money I've saved over the past 5 years I've been able to dump $25,000 into my house which increased the value 2.5× of what I got it for this year. It's possible to live the American dream by controlling your spending and proper investment of the money saved.
@@buck-mq3qo what city do you live in where you can buy any house for 120k? That's an absurdly low amount compared to where a large percent of America lives.
I love how he said “frugal” and not “cheap”. My parents used to own a high-end luggage and handbag store and used to tell stories of how some super rich ppl went out of their way to save as much as a few dollars on a handbag. You wouldn’t believe it.
Thats a lot to do with why they're rich, it's an attitude that the decadent west is fast losing
@@jayhillrubis I don't think you can become a multi-millionaire just by being frugal. Maaaybe you can make a very dated argument about eventually being able to afford a house or something, but not true wealth. There may be a correlation, but definitely no causation on this axis.
@@jayhillrubis You're not wrong but being frugal is just 1 aspect of many many more that makes you able to be so obscenely rich, and for many those aspects aren't at all as positive or aspiring as being frugal. The "issue" is systemic, many people who are frugal don't become rich because the incentive structures put in place are so monstrous that those people hold on to their humanity instead of selling it for money. This is especially the case with people who work to keep their family, friends, loved ones and what they believe in above surface in this difficult climate.
@@jayhillrubisnaah its kinda dumb. Beeing smart is not buying that BMW if you are the person earning 100k. Saving a few bucks when you make millions is insignificant.
@@hansklok3564 truth LOL!
A whole video about once you reach a disposable income bracket you can just drop all of that extra money in the stock market and allow it to make money 24/7 as long as you have a good fund manager...
But please tell me again about how saving a few dollars puts you on the road to become a millionaire.
Step one to fixing society's financial issues education... Although millennials, gen Z, and alpha are all starting to figure out that the game is rigged. Too bad it took millennials so long to catch on with the program.
As a kid, the USA seemed like a great place. Big detached houses, green lawns and nice cars. As I get older and learn more about the country, I have more appreciation for Europe. The townhouses, walkable neighborhoods, bike lanes, public transport, affordable healthcare, etc.
they have those in the US too but they are usually some of the most expensive parts of the country like Lincoln Park Chicago or Greenwich Village NYC
Which means you've grown up and now appreciate what is truly valueble.
In The Netherlands we have bike lanes even in the poorer neighboorhoods, so no one is condemned to cars and suffering
@@mellie2003 I know, I live in the Netherlands ;-)
I thought the same, currently live in Australia! Very grateful to live here, I like free /affordable health care :)
Yep pretty much. I've only ever liked the idea of living in NYC due to transport, walkable neighbourhoods etc. Always loved LA too but the driving is too much. We tried walking between some famous sites & regularly ran out of pavement randomly lol. And the suburbs generally just depress me, can't even drive to local metro/train station stop. Same with Florida, literally just going from 1 AC room to a AC car to an AC office/supermarket etc. I've seen more people walk around in heat of Dubai due to good links between trams to the bigger metro via shaded pathways. Heat shouldn't be an issue either. I expect so much more from the world leader but then you relaise half the country literally refutes the concept of government/taxes or spending on anything that isn't military....usually the poorest people too. So broken...yet so powerful/sucessful. Weird af
I like how he discusses the very intangible benefits of earning more: access, connections, health, safety, noise, free time, etc
The relationship one has with risk is also totally different. You can have an idea, start up a business, hire a team of people highly talented people to help you build it while you steer the ship, and if it fails, it literally doesn't affect you. At all. (Though that team of highly talented people gets cut loose to figure their lives out.) If it succeeds, you can feel secure in the knowledge that you "worked hard and earned your success". A very different experience from the bottom 99%, who might have amazing ideas, but no time, capital, or risk capacity to do a damn thing about it.
@@EggTamago7 totally... And a lot of things are more expensive for poor people as they have to pay interest and fees a lot
Also the implicit cost of paying people like a security guard just barely enough to survive, making them more susceptible to bribes. A society with increasing income inequality makes bribes easier and cheaper for the rich people to do and more necessary for desperate poor people to accept, like a negative feedback loop, leading to more bribes and more unequal society.
@@EggTamago7this is true
@@EggTamago7 Kind of how kids of really rich people have infinite chances to start businesses because they are being bankrolled by their parents money + their connections and if one of those businesses succeeds the media now claims this kid is "self made". Its so ridiculously aggravating.
This is a great Analysis! $100,000 use to be the ideal income. It’s still a great income but in this economy it’s the equivalent to $65,000/year. A few years ago my employer had to do a cost of living adjustment to our salary. I’m grateful but not all employers can do so.
Not all employers can and often times those that can won’t
Just remember who created the inflation and made your dollars worth far less ... Democrats
My God, when you said potatoes as the go-to for 'fresh produce', 2 weeks per year for 'vacations' and sick leave, spending $320 per month for food and not having public transportation options available, I am blessed to live in the EU.
where do you live btw ?
@@sigfigronath not op, i live in poland and i am amazed too at the differences
The EU has been crushing it lately. So much so, that you’re making American firms think twice about screwing us over just because your market is so big (Apple switching to USB C comes to mind).
thank you!!!!!
(Side note, what bothers me about having this discussion with other Americans is that they almost ALWAYS lash out with: ‘Oh America is SO bad - just leave then!’ And it’s like…. They’re missing the point. It’s not that we hate America, it’s just so saddening that we truly could be the best place to live on Earth - we have the human talent, ability and determination to do it. It’s just we have chosen not to….. we’ve opted for the system Johnny outlined in this vid…. And it’s depressing af lol)
Anywho enjoy your holiday, healthcare and workers rights :(
-a depressed American lol
Yeah... I calculated mine because this video felt kinda stupid? Like the way it works in the US
I have ~$1800 left after taxes
Rent: $270 laundry, and internet included
Electricity: $35
Food: ~$380
Home insurance: $10
I bike to work, because Sweden is bike-friendly
And that's it. I have $1105-ish left every month.
But I do have some non-essential spendings.
I smoke, that's $150 a month
I drink beer, I eat out, I have a car, I have Spotify, I have HBO and Disney+
I wash my car twice a month
I am still left with like $800 that I save every month
America is cooked
Bro i literally go through the same stuff in europe(belgium)
A $50k car and regular detailing is like lighting money on fire. A complete waste of money for the middle class.
It's true, I wouldn't spend the money that way. But many do, and aside from that one, I think he told a pretty common and understandable story for each income bracket.
yeah, I thought his 50k and 100k examples were living beyond their means. Maaaaybe if you lived about 20 years on 100k, you'd have the savings to let loose a little bit like that, otherwise you are just pushing your own self down a few notches for no good reason.
I make about $30k /year and bought a $30k van that I now live out of. That’s the new American dream, bundling both my transportation and housing in one. The unexpected cost is that most parking places cost around $600-800/mo so I’m not really saving any money, unless I want to move everyday, which is expensive on gas and exhausting mentally. But I do own my own home!
The spending in the middle class categories seemed pretty lavish to me as well, but not unrealistic. I know many people that make much more than I do, but live more poorly than me, because of their spending habits. Fifteen years ago, I was making about $40k and I felt like I was rich (granted the housing and car markets were very different at the time but other expenses were comparable). I spent money like I was poor, so I was constantly putting money in the bank and never worried about when my next paycheck would arrive... Live below your means and play the game if you want to climb up to a higher bracket. The system isn't made for you to advance, but it's possible if you do it smart and put in the effort.
@@Den3productions Heya, just wanted to chime in here. You might want to try networking with people in the area and see if someone might have a driveway or piece of land you could rent for a few hundred instead. Can also put up ads on Craigslist and such.
The fact that health insurance costs this much in the US and then the companies get to move the goalposts and deny all kinds of claims is ridiculous...
its the same in germany... if not worse.
Thats what happens when he government subsidizes health care. Prices rise.
@@internetceo At least it's mandatory, employer pays half of it and nobody is scared to get picked up by an ambulance because he would need to declare bankruptcy later... :)
If I had it, full insurance for my wife and I, is more than our mortgage...
12:44 @@internetceo
I really appreciate you for using chapters in your videos! It really does help me, an annual UA-cam subscriber, out when wanting to get to what I came for and the occasional skipping the sponsorship section.
So please keep it up, because viewers like me love watching videos that are structured as a reference guide.
Thank you.
22:24 “Do I cook? No I do not cook” (dramatic pause) 😂
Goals
The super rich need more time for playing golf... Or tennis.
@@edwardblangsted4540 For them time is money, so spending money on a chef gives them more time to work and earn money.
@@edwardblangsted4540 ofcourse, with company executives!
Best moment in this video 😂
And money rain in the back
I went from making around 35k to 85k in the last 4 years through raises and promotions at my current workplace from a machine operator to a management position. Even THAT feels like a COMPLETELY different reality.
Same, I went from 40k to 82k in the last three through raises and promotions. My life is totally changed
Congratulations to you both! I hope more people at the lower income bands work hard and intentionally to go up the ladder and change their lives instead of waiting for others to fix it for them. Well done!
That's wonderful! Now focus on holding on to this amazing achievement and look further in life. Maybe even start taking care of your health more.
The trick there is to not spend much more than you were. Obviously decent food and health care that extend your life expectancy and health expectancy are worth paying out for, but so many people double their income and immediately double their expenditure in things like housing and a nicer car when they could have been saving and investing that income. You'll see both reactions in the people around you and you'll see which gives people a better future.
Changed by saving 40k more per year and getting out of the "no money" trap in 3-5 years or spending a lot more each month and staying in the same trap (albeit at a higher level) indefinitely?
I love how "lifestyle creep" is so fundamental in this video. If you are making anywhere between 40-60k a year, this will be a huge thing to master to allow you to save more.
Self discipline is the key to avoiding and destroying debt. Financial knowledge is the key to growing what you have.
@@starventure I wish they taught Financial Literacy in schools. It is a disgrace how uninformed people are on such a crucial aspect of being an adult.
@@EsotericDichotomy they do - in the private expensive schools. Public schools? never.
Seriously. If you eventually have the salary of the $100,000/year earner and continue to budget like the $40,000 earner (which, yes, means still driving the crappy Subaru), you will have GENERATIONAL wealth after 10 years of maintaining that lifestyle.
Which means if you start making that kind of money at 25, by the time you're 35, you can start living a life that's unrecognizable to the average American, even if you never get a single pay raise. Fully paid off house, new car every three years, high-end speed boat, etc.
All it takes is sacrificing for a few years up front, but a lot of people (especially young people) who make that $100,000/year feel like they "deserve" to have extravagant lifestyles immediately, which keeps them from ever attaining financial freedom and becoming truly wealthy.
@@EsotericDichotomyyou need school to tell you that you need to save more and spend less than you earn? The internet is free. “I need to know about interest rates” chill.
Looking for ways to earn money daily is sometimes frustrating and is a pain in the ass, I couldn’t really keep it up, it’s exhausting 😔
Stock investment has always been off the chart, it’s either you’re good at it or worse. It’s better to learn from an expert than venturing into stock market on your own 👌
Turning $100 into $110 is work. Turning $100 million into $110 million is inevitable
Higher value investments return more cause companies have more choices with larger sums and they will pay more to get your money. That 100 will easily get 15/20 million return. Can live great life on the returns. Even with 1 million cash invested can still get 100 k a year which is 8500 month for sitting on your ass.
Nope you can get the same 10% return on $100.
@@canada-gl7si where/how?
@@rodrigojds It's pretty simple. the S&P 500 for example. If you don't want only a 10% return annually from the S&P 500, you can invest in BRK and get the same returns that warren buffet gets (Approx. 20% per annum)
@@rodrigojds They are both done the same way, the stock market. The problem is the extra $10 can just pay for your meal, while the extra $10 million can pay for hundreds of peoples whole lives.
“And hope that no big maintenance issues arise” Oh but they always do, and at the worst possible time 😭
Yeah, I had to replace parts in my car for 1400... while I was in labor.
Yup, went homeless the other year because of it
People earning $25k or less in a whole year shouldn’t pay taxes at all 😭
They don't. It will be refunded.
@@samueljensen9896 why didnt he include that in the video
Not if it's via 1099's...right?
Yeah, they get some tax breaks.
@@samueljensen9896 Social Security and Medicare taxes are not refunded. George would pay nothing in federal income taxes on his income of $25k. State and local taxes are a question mark. Depends where you life. If George could manage to get some capital gains from stocks (that he bought REALLY cheap and sold high), he would pay NOTHING in taxes on it, up to a total income of $47026.
I wouldn't be comfortable committing to a $19,000 monthly payment no matter what my income is.
You're only saying that because your current income can't support it. Once people start making huge sums of money, their entire attitude and outlook changes
@@VinodhBalloutBro6711 I suppose. But I also realize that circumstances can change in a heartbeat. If I lost that huge income all of a sudden and was still on the hook for a huge mortgage, that could be an unwelcomed challenge.
@@JevonMusicGroup This is the thing about the ultra wealthy in this country in recent decades. The amount of expendable income they have and do spend has led to the creation of blossoming cottage industries of eccentric-billionaire-money products, where the correlation between price and value is so completely disassociated from anything tangible and real that it literally is like living in an alternative reality.
After this half hour long, important, well researched piece of journalism I still cannot get over the wooden tub. There are wooden bathtubs?! I want one so bad!
My first thought was how do you clean it?😂
@@BallistikKittyme too!!
@@BallistikKitty You don't. You're rich. That's for someone else to figure out.
@@Unbreathlessthat’s so real ! Nice comment.
Sounds like it's going to be a smell problem at some point
Thank you for making this video. It really hits close to home. As someone who is struggling making about 28k a year, im really scared. I feel like at any moment i can become homeless. I cant even afford to pay my phone bill next month or fix the Air conditioning in my car. Also massively in debt with CCs and student loans. I really hope it makes waves accross our government and politics. Things need to change fast, as everyday i become more and more terrified.
There are two options:
Earn more.
Or Spend Less.
@@FWtravelsyou had it easy grandpa
Have you considered the possibility that your fear is what makes you sink more and more into despair? The cure to fear is courage. Only courage can motivate you to overcome your poverty mindset and use your resources (including intellectual) wisely. There are plenty of rags to riches stories. None of them feature "I get more and more terrified" but rather "i was terrified but I did something about it". All you're doing is watching UA-cam in hopes that someone else will save you.
I make over 200k a year but still driving a 1999 Isuzu with no AC. I pay off my credit cards balance at the end of the month and my student loan within 5 years of graduation. Yet, people making less than 30k a year are spending their money on things they can live without and racking up debts while blaming their society for their self inflicted problems 🤦🏼♂️
@@mercury2cim not no “grandpa” im literally 23, and he is right. Spend less or make more. Crying in ur bathroom abt how the “gov fkd u up” instead of working more and leaening skillsets to get you out of there is your fault. Go make more! Or go spend less
I come from switzerland and am 33 and earn gross 7000 swiss francs a year which is about 8250 dollars, of which I have net 6200
Car: Audi A4 with bezin insurance = 300
Rent: 3 room apartment with garden in a small town = 1250
Taxes: every month = 800
Health insurance and additional insurance = 450
Furniture insurance, legal protection = 50
Electricity, water = 50
Internet, cell phone, netflix = 60
Food: And only buy bio = 500
I have left over at the end of the month = 2740
Partying, eating out = 700
The rest I save every month = 2000
bro went from foodstamps to chevron ceo in 30 mins. Thats some serious talent right there !
he was on the grind set XD
And yet his name kept changing with each promotion.
Its a bit weird though. Because it doesnt show the standard of living decay. The 100k guy is like a lower middle class guy in the 80s. And hes the top 10% of earners. The movie vacation has the main character doing better than him. Not only that but hes alone as well. The million dollar guy is more like the 100k guy back then. Its gotten extremely bad period. Like we were past the tipping point in the 90s. People were arguing for $15 mininum wage back then. Most people are living in poverty period. 77% of families need more money just to live.
Bro went from real life to Succession really quickly😂
Lol
Succession is a level above the last one, with net worths in the dozens of billions
😂😂😂
One main thing I noticed in your video is that all this characters are alone. No parents, no girlfriend/wife, no kids. No family. And they should be included in this study as they affect this characters both positively and negatively
Real life!!! Because we exist in societies, and the pressures abound!!!
I was about to say the same thing. Ive had a kid and in a relationship in the last 3 years and my costs have risen by about 45k a year. Families are expensive, no wonder way less people are having kids
theres no data for that he merely based characters on the data provided
Your right most have family's and that definitely changes the amount very quickly
I am Tired of Life 😢
By reading the comments, it's clear that Johnny's average viewer is young, broke and completely ignorant when it comes to economics.
$2,200 a month for taxes at $100,000 annually is wild.
It's true
I usually get around $300-$500 a check taken out with two checks a month and I make around 60k
I pay about that and maybe a bit more (~2300/mo & ~30%) of my income in Federal+State+Local taxes at a 100k salary. Can confirm it's pretty wild.
26% tax whats wild about that
@@eduard2113 That's literally an entire extra salary for the first guy
People with 25K a year with no family support are one accident away from homelessness!
Even with family support. Most likely their family is one accident away from homelessness too :(
Tbh, it’s actually a positive for society. It’s really messed up that the 1% gets all the gold, but they are also statistically the most depressed , have kids that overdose , are married multiple times and have lousy relationships, have no real sense of purpose, and die lonely.
Meanwhile, the “poor” family has a strong bond, good relationships, give their last dime to help each other, and die surrounded by family and friends :)
Can confirm. Somehow dug myself out of homelessness after AI took my career for a minute there (artist and designer). It was a terrifying moment in my life to go from $80k a year to $25k. Luckily I can already see that AI art is being rejected by many now, so my career is turning around again.
@@stevrgrs
It reminds me of how some of the very wealthy need special therapists who specialize in the exclusive problems they have to deal with. "Does this person actually like me, or are they just using me?", and that thought would drive me crazy, but only answerable if they lose most of their money. They probably don't spend much time with their family either because they are more focused on their company/companies and/or political influence.
I make a little less than $25k a year and I'm still living with my mother at 28. What you said is very true. A couple months ago in May I got a really bad sprain in my left wrist and I've been on light duty at my job ever since (I work as a ramp agent for a major airline). I work part-time on paper, but I used to work between 60-80 hours bi-weekly, making $19.17/hr (now its $19.72/hr after my yearly pay rise :) ). Since I'm on light duty I'm prohibited from picking up hours and I have to work my base hours. I was able to go half with my mother on rent and even paid for her car insurance/phone bill from time to time, but for the last 3 months its been rough. I have to do Uber Eats after work to not only maintain the going half on rent agreement, but to stay alive. I've got a car note, debt, phone, utilities, etc. that I also pay for and after 2 days of receiving my paycheck, I'm in the negatives. Its very disheartening and its made my depression way worse than it already was. I also have diabetes and its important for me to keep up with my doctors. Haven't discussed my diabetes since a day after I reported my injury, which has been 3 months and I'm supposed to meet with my doctors monthly. I haven't been able to relax as I'm always thinking about how I'm going to survive tomorrow and making sure I've got enough gas to make it work. Because I'm relying on my car for a passive income, I'm spending a lot more on gas, as I have to fill it up every 2 days. Its very true that the already shaky wheels do go falling off after something like a simple injury essentially makes you borderline homeless in this country.
@@makeyourlifeaworkofart If you are ok, i would like to chat/email with you about what happened and how AI caused that.
Probably the best and by far one of the most important videos you guys have put out. Thank you to the entire team and the courage to make this!
Courage ???
This topic doesn't take courage to talk about. It's even discussed in public schools.
Correction: It takes courage to talk about this and make the statements that he made in the end (e.g. raising taxes on the rich) At least in the current US political sphere
+
@@batessdd 😂😂😂😂😂
Your documentaries are high quality Bruv. ✅
Imagine being under that $25,000 a year bracket. I'm permanently disabled and my income is based on whatever social security I paid in while I was able to work. I was making $72,000 a year before I became disabled at age 37. So, I make about $18,000 a year from that. Yes, I do qualify for Medicare and it is helpful, but I still have to pay a monthly premium out of my social security check and copays. And anything medicare doesn't cover is out of pocket. The whole reason I cannot work is because of my health issues. I _need_ to see doctors and get prescriptions filled every month. But, I am extremely lucky. I inherited a house from my grandmother that is paid for. If I didn't inherit a paid off house, I have no idea how I would survive. And even with not having a mortgage or rent, I still have to pay yearly property taxes, home owners insurance, and maintenance on the house. I pay someone to cut my grass and I have a general contractor that I call if the pump breaks down or the dishwasher stops working. Last year, my septic system needed to be pumped. I am still making payments on that. I'm not sure where I'm going to get the $2200 I'm going to own on property taxes next year. I'm seriously considering renting out my spare room to a stranger. The whole reason I cannot work is my health but it's my health care costs that make me wish I had a job.
have you tried lifting yourself up by your boot straps?
@@yidavv Aw, man. Why didn't I think of that? lol
@@xliquidflames 😄
I live in fear of disability that prevents me from employment, so I sincerely wish you luck, perseverance, and the much needed political change.
I have been blind all my life but pretty able to work.. until I was fired a year ago and had to move down with my parents who now live in a rural-ish area. I've applied for SSDI, but they're getting older and the house isn't paid off.. they're consistently like "it'll be fine"... They don't seem to get it. I am fortunate to have my parents, I know.. but man is it mentally rough.
It is scary how nobody talks about The 21 Former Doctor Secrets book from last month
I just read it man, yeah they removed it from some other platforms
Thank youu❤
This is a ad bot watch out guys @johnnyharris can you delete these
@@NorthRoyaltonad bot with like bot clicker. Please make this for spam removal on UA-cam
@@NorthRoyalton it is what?
the mr. beastification of johnny harris
if the algorithm demands, so it is
What does this video have to do with the vapid content that Mr beast churns out exactly?
This comment makes no sense whatsoever
T'as marché sur ma langue😅😅
I thought it was a Mr Beast video
100% agree, once you get above 25 million, there always a statue in the front lawn, a Louise Bourgeois if you want to flex.
Yep. Working at Kroger, at $15/hr, still has me having nothing for lunch, because the few items I would buy doubled in price, and my breakfast is the $2.10 dozen of leftover donuts whenever I can get them. Which leaves lunchmeat sandwiches for dinner. Makes me feel great looking at our store manager, the guy who makes $200k a year with $32k quarterly bonuses, and nobody knows what he does. He and his managers don't hesitate to punish us for the slightest bit of relaxing on the job, meanwhile they get six figures to stand around on their phones, sit in their office and chat, not follow schedules, screw with and screw up timesheets, and demand workers to work days they said they couldn't.
I'm really sorry and no one should have to live like that, you are worth more.
Well my friend we all start somewhere usually at the bottom of the food chain and at the end of the dwy he is your boss , such a high paying job doesn't come by being a good worker but he probably went to university and got a masters degree or a diploma in business management. We shouldn't be angry with what others are earning they live there lives how they want to we are all entitled to that, don't forget those managers were in your shoes once upon a time they probably got the same treatment maybe they testing you see how you would react, don't react be better make more sales got to university and become thier boss.. I hope this wasn't a harsh thing to say I'd rather not feel sorry for you but uplift you :)
Kroger store manager definitely not making 200k a year😂😂😂😂
Here in Perth Western Australia we have our 3 major shopping centres Coles, Woolworths and IGA. Woolworths ceo alone was making around 8.6mil a year and a store manager would make around 110k per year where as an average employee would make around 56k a year. So what am I trying to say is that we all start somewhere and if you want that luxury lifestyle have to work hard to get it, only 1% of people will be successful most will give up before they even start thats life gets to hard so we switch to what's comfortable for us
@@ArthoireI think that he needs to listen to his boss's do what he's told coz from im reading he's just standard employeeim not saying this in a nasty way either it's just as I stated in my other comments you gotta work hard to get that life and only 1% make it anything is possible tjrough sheer determination be the lappy do whatever they say and you yourself will climb that ladder go to school gets your masters ya know what mean these jobs aren't given lightly but to people who have experience and certificates
They can boss you around coz thier the boss if people don't like it then they can quit thier job but that wouldn't be smart lose your only source of income hard enough finding a new job these days. Anyways back to the point if he's on his breaks then they shouldn't have the right by law to ask him to work thats highly illegal and can be charged coz your entitled to your 2 breaks a dayt if he relaxing while on the clock the they do have the right to give you a hard time coz its like what am I paying you for scenario no boss likes to see workers relaxing while on the clock that's just fact
An interesting twist on this format might have been to frame it as 4 people in 4 income brackets who are all employed by the top "earner". George is the landscaper at Robert's mansion, Simon is Robert's private driver, Tim is Robert's private doctor, and Noah is Robert's dinner guest or something like that. The trickle down people want to show you how Robert is creating this ecosystem for all the little fish to live in underneath him but the illusion of upward mobility means those little fish never really stand a chance at swimming any higher in the pond.
wow
that's eye opening and gives a completely different perspective to the video
You nailed it. I'm trying to start my own business, but in order to make it real I need capital. I make beyond Tim money, but to make Noah and beyond money, the bank wants me to to use our family home as collateral. I can't risk that no matter how good my start-up is. And before you say "find a private investor!"... 8 out of 10 Angel investing setups are total scams.
Noah could also be the general manager for a subcontractor who services Robert's business, or some other sort of junior business partner.
I was expecting that, but it's good video nonetheless.
A friend of mine just sold his landscape business he started in highschool ... for 1.4 million. Everyone can move up in America, you just have to be smart enough to do it.
It’s honestly a slap in the face when you really look at the difference in incomes. We slave ourselves for the few that exploit our sufferings
Capitalism in a nutshell...
@@helene8854 imagine if WE organized ourselves and sought justice against the greedy elites maybe Hollywood will make movie about it idk
@@helene8854what's the alternative?
Dumb. Most who are rich started out with low wages. America has best upward mobility of any country. If you work, you can easily rise out of poverty. If you want to game all day and spend your money on sneakers and vape, then you will always be a poor loser.
@@fareshajjar1208 lol bro i work hard not everyone has to be a ceo in this life. It’s just funny how older generations were able to work a trade by a house and raise a family but now my generation can’t do the same.
For metropolitan/HCOL areas, I'd say that it would take $100k to afford the lifestyle illustrated in the backdrop that currently is dedicated for the $25k lifestyle.
I like how you accentuated the ridiculousness of different scenarios without spiraling into judgement. "this is the way it is, and this is what than means."
I think the one thing that works the opposite is Hotels - the more you pay the less you get for free. Holiday inn Express - free buffet every morning. Ritz Carlton - no free buffet, you have to pay for room service, which is astronomical in cost.
@@Synoopy2 sure, but the room service is going to be lobster and steak. Not saying it's a good value, but you're paying for more expensive food than just Belgian waffles and scambled eggs. (although those free continental breakfasts fucking HIT)
As someone from Atlanta, I can tell you right now you do NOT want to live in the houses you chose for the lower incomes 😅
Agreed. I was going to say… that place chosen is probably a health hazard.
Isn’t that part of the problem tho?
Curious to know why it is a health hazard. Is it industrial area or what?@@michelleivyknudsen
Unfortunately there's no "other choice"
I don't live in Atlanta, but been around the area a lot and was thinking maybe the same.
I know this is a serious video but I’m obsessed with Johnny’s rich boy Robert persona, specifically when he remembers that he needs to buy his Italy house so he needs to get something more modest 😂
Recessions are part of the economic cycle, all you can do is make sure you're prepared and plan accordingly. I graduated into a recession (2009). My 1st job after college was aerial acrobat on cruise ships. Today I'm a VP at a global company, own 3 rental properties, invest in stocks and biz, built my own business, and have my net worth increase by $500k in the last 4 years.
Gross: $48,000
Net: $31,000
Savings: $22.38
It's a decent wage by anyone's standards. Problem is housing economy then. Well, Johnny Harris managed to find a crack den in some suburbs for 750 a month, perhaps you could too?
Claim 9 dependants and then just don't file taxes.
gross: 39.600 € pa
net: 27.972 € pa
Savings: ~ 5000 € pa
And that's in a country US citizens call "high tax"
A formally EU buddy I have at work and I figured out the "tax rate" comparison. It's basically the same but the employer takes the healthcare part, property taxes, gas taxes, sales tax. It all adds up over here in the U.S of A to where it's basically the same. We just don't get as much vacation and the health care is bismal for those that make too much to qualify for Medicaid and too little to be with an employer that provides a group funded policy.
Stop spending money on clothes and irrelevant crap. I make a great six figure living and I canceled my Netflix subscription because it went over $14. That’s the difference between those of us with money and those of us without. Decision making is a big deal.
One of the best parts about this video is getting to see everyone’s comments on their place on the chart and peer into the accuracy of what JH was talking about
Samuel Robson Walton's Ferrari 250 GTO costs about $120 Million. His mechanic makes Home visits too.
He pays ZERO in taxes, but abhors having to provide benefits for his employees.
Why doesn’t he pay taxes?
Because politicians are cheap to own
@@agus.lorenzo Cause a lot of his wealth is tied up in stock, they never or rarely sell , instead they take out loans with stock as collateral & live off that. Banks know they're good forit & they can just pay it off via stock. Equally he inherited his wealth so will naturally have countless private wealth that was only taxed once decades ago. If you want something big or fancy the company can buy or pay for it via offshore firms, be it a private jet, a NFL team, a new house, the expenses of your employees/secuity etc. We have same thing in the UK where one of the largest land owners who is nobelty & a lord is worth billions but never pays anything in taxes. Simmilar to the king/queen. It's old wealth, you hang on to it to avoid capital gains tax & inheritance tax is literally only for the upper middle class to pay who don't have lawyers to avoid it.
@@d.b.cooper1 So I guess the interest rate on the loans taken out with stocks used as collateral is cheaper than them having to deal with income tax/capital gains tax?
@ButteredPecan17 exactly. They get insanely low interest rates because for the bank, the loan is not a huge risk - like Johnny said, "they know he's good for it."
Plus, when he goes to pay back the loan, he can just pay it off from his profits on other investments. When you're that next-level wealthy, your money makes you more money (that "passive income" that alpha bro shills love so much) so you want to keep as much of it "working for you" as possible.
So by the end of it, you've "spent" 15 million dollars in living expenses, but you haven't lost a cent of your wealth doing so - and in fact probably grew your pile even bigger in the meantime!
I was so sure I was going to watch like 20 minutes of this and banish it to my saved folder. Now I’m hooked 😭
I love how he was getting into character
The 1 million dollar finance bro😆
His revenue from UA-cam is probably around that much tbh
It would be so cool if he did this as a series for each country. Would love to see the perspective in Canada vs UK vs Australia.
Wow! Im from Russia, and 25000$ in year is our upper middle class, that have their own house/apartment, car, commercial medicine etc. The average salary in Moscow is about 1700$/month after all taxes. Poor people, who lives for 150-200$ per month spends more than 50% for food. Most people have their own apartments. Thats afgordable and because of compact living and good public transport, you can live in cheap "sleeping area" and still have access for all infrastricure in the city.
But the main problem for our country is income stratification as well
“My name is Noah I’m in finance” lol 🤣
Bros building an ark Megayacht
"I'm very important"
Noah....
I wasn't financial free until my 40's and I'm still in my 40's, bought my third house already, earn I'm in a monthly through passive income, and i got 4 out of 5 goals, just hope it encourages someone here. that it doesn't matter if you don't have any of them right now, you can start Today's regardless your age to Invest and change your future! Investing in the financial market is a grand choice I made.
I’ve been following Jason Graystone FX strategy for a while now. His insights are incredible
Absolutely! His approach is so systematic. Have you thought about investing?
What impresses me most about Jason. is how well He explains basic concept of winning before actually letting you use his tradein signals. This goes a long way to ensure winningtrades
@@IssoufOuareI’m seriously considering it. I love how he focuses on risk management.
Forex trading is really profitable, investing in it now will be the wisest thing to do especially with the current rise in Bitcoin and other stocks.
C'mon Johnny, you didn't even mention the bugout bunkers they build in Hawaii once everything goes to hell.
Poor: Spend Money
Wealthy: Buy Time
Poor: Trade time for money
Rich: Trade money for time.
Time is worth more than money.
Some people think time is worthless.
Some people realize it's the only thing that matters.
@@Orinslayer 100% sir
This was really well done! I like the style of Johnny taking on each persona. Killer job by the editors too!
Loved this video. I do wish he included a segment in which he added the cost of having kids/costs of having a family, because that’s a huge factor in many Americans day to day.
Good thing hundreds of dollars in repair costs a month was budgeted out for a brand new 50k car you don’t even need!
Kids don't cost all that much as far as buying things... it's the opportunity costs.
People keep forgetting about how expensive furniture can be as well! Include that in the budget lol
one of your best videos yet man!
it doesn't have that intensity and sense of urgency that most of your videos do,
which are also very good of course.
but this one has a more relaxed approach which can be refreshing at times.
that being said the edit and the care with all the little details is top level as usual.
good job!
"my budget for housing is $854.... I'll think i'll be renting. "
Think again my friend.
So live in car.
Live in a trashcan on a skateboard and save up for a down payment
@@user-sw7od4yg7n right I learned back in 2010 that buying was insanely cheaper than renting even back then in the middle east coast. Couldn't imagine how much rent is now
Thinkin again , guess I'll be homeless.
Roommates.
Someone's restaurant bill is entire yearly income of Someone's family.
You see these viral posts of receipts every year from clubs/resturants in London, Monaco, Dubai to Vegas. Truly mind boggling. Even wilder is just how many people follow those insta accounts & suck up to the people.
Someone has to hire George.
if tim lived like george for 2 years he'd be noah
20:44 "I'm Robert. I'm an eccentric boy". That hit me in a way I wasn't expecting
Actually had me mad, ngl.
That was the most Mr. Beast opening Johnny has ever done.
Wdym he didn’t groom anyone
not sure wat you mean, i didn't see a single gambling lottery for kids in there
@@slick3996 mr beast like me fr fr
@@slick3996😂😂 loving how the recent allegations completely changed our views on him.
I think this video put things into perspective for me more than any other finance video I’ve watched. It’s crazy just how hard life can be for some people, and just how much more you can do if you earn more.
Great video, subbed
Told me don't make bad decisions. Be a mechanic, plumber, electrician and skip the womens studies. My question is why are so many adults people over 25 or 30 making so little money?
@@arthurkineard7356The reason: Financial Literacy. So few people know anything about making money let alone growing that money. I know people in every income bracket the video showed and it ALL boils down to that. This is why you see some dumb or lazy people make more money than doctors or lawyers. They’re more financially literate. Robert kiyosaki’s books explain this in detail.
@@Erick_Vazquez Thanks for the Book recommendation, if it'll really help me understand how to make better monetary decisions, then I'll buy it as soon as you can❤
I'd love to see a part two to this where Johnny goes and documents people who actually live in these lifestyles. The stats are fun, but I bet the real-world experiences are pretty eye opening.
That grey area where you earn "too much" to qualify for state aid, but not enough to live, is killer.
I say this as someone who lives in a state where $7.25 is still the minimum wage.
It’s crazy!
It’s like “get 20% discount when spend more than 100$ on electric” and those affordable one are 49,50$ so you’re forced to buy 3 instead of 2 or buy the more expensive one which is 80$ or something.
Do better.
You only get paid 7.25 an hour when you're only worth 7.25 an hour...
So so true!
I cannot stress enough how amazing this video is! Everything from the story telling to the editing, and most of all, the message! Thank you!
Bros rich 💀
bro is not george
Wow!! Thanks for the generous comment. (And the tip!)
@@johnnyharris I've never seen the pay gap explained like this, it's very eye opening!
Bros Noah 😭
I live in NYC, and I lived in the $25-$45k income range for most of my 20s. Not an easy task in NYC, especially when you don't have the right work papers. Life was so much more stressful, especially when I dropped into the $25-30k range. Every decision I made related to money was a cause for stress, even trips to the grocery store. Forget eating out, dinners out with friends, the movies. I was stretched so thin all the time, and after a decade, it wore me down so much I'm sure it took years off my life.
Now in my 30s and a permanent resident, I make about $70k a year, and life is so much easier. It's like a giant boulder was taken off my back. I still run a tight budget because I know the hard times are closer than you think, but life literally started to have more color. I can't spend like crazy, of course, but I can now do little things like eat out occasionally, buy my friend a drink, or just get a new pair of shoes.
In other countries it would've been impossible to leave the 25k bracket. Good for you to have the opportunity and incentives to do so
@@dtegg91 I left nyc once I got near the 100k threshold. 50% of my income was going down the drain as the city was decaying around me
Go to a trade school. Plumbers and electricians easily earn 6 figures. People are just lazy these days.
@@noob.168 that's what I did essentially, learned a trade
When I was in my twenties, there were some months where I had an Excel sheet to track expenses, so I knew how much I could spend and not go broke.
Now I finished my studies and that seems like a completely different life to me
29:50 this video was soo interesting but at the end it gave me the chills when I realized I’m George and there is no way out.
You work for 40yrs to have $1m in your retirement, Meanwhile some people are putting just $10k in a meme coin for just few months and now they are multi millionaires.
I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life
How
..? Am a newbie in crypto investment, please can you guide me through on how you made profit?
Thanks to Mrs Deborah Davis.
She's a licensed broker here in the states
After I raised up to 325k trading with her I bought a new House and a car here in the states 🇺🇸🇺🇸also paid for my son's surgery (Oscar). Glory to God.shalom..😊
Trading without professional guide... Huh I laugh you, because you will remain where you are or even make huge losses that will stop you from trading, this has been one of the biggest problem to new traders
that $25k life is so true.. so relatable.
i spent on house repairs, so no money for food for a month
and before that i had a health emergency so, it's been horrible.
No food for a month?
Because of house repairs?
how did you survive for a month without food?
@@ahaviahbessemer9844 maybe drinking more water
for your pfp alone, maybe you deserve it? have you ever thought of that?
@@ahaviahbessemer9844 I'm more curious how they are buying a house they can't afford.
But yeah, are they eating or just going on a fast or being hyperbolic?
This is so depressing. For many years, I have thought, that the U.S. is a paradise for almost everyone. Now, as I delve deeper and deeper the actual, underlying reailty, it scares me. As a European, I wish the every U.S. citizen a better world and a better country (ragarding average life).
There's a lot of poverty in Europe as well, thankfully we have a social security net in most countries, but we still have growing inequality here too. And once you're trapped in social security dependency it's very hard to get out of it.
Thanks for the well wishings. I don’t think any of us are holding our breath waiting for official relief anytime soon though.
You could argue that things are working as designed.
It is a paradise for people who came from a 3rd world country.
@user-kbascd4o24 How does the culture promote infertility? Our culture celebrate parenthood, we spend a lot of budgets on education and social welfare. Problem is inequality when the Rich keeps higher % of GDP there is less money for poor and middleclass to have children so we get negative fertility rate. This is global problem, they have same problem in South Korea. Inequality promotes infertility, not whatever vague cultural thing you are referring too.
@@user-ds8gf3ki2gHe meant that europe is a paradise for the 3rd world.
"It's not richer the one who earns the more but the one who needs the least"
I have been in the 25k, 40k, 60k, 100k, now 250k a year. Let me tell you for those that say money doesn’t buy happiness doesn’t know what it’s like to be poor. I literally have zero financial worries. Never look at the price of groceries, spending $300 on dinner doesn’t matter. Keep grinding everyone it will get better.
I say it doesn’t bring happiness but gets rid of the stress and hardship of not having.
My Mom always says money doesn't buy happiness but it sure does help. Being poor is absolutely miserable.
Same.
I remember when I went from 8 dollars an hour to 18. I thought I was rich.
I went from 50k to 105k within a year. It’s really nice to not have to worry about being able to pay the oil bill or having to live on ramen until your next paycheck. I think those people really mean to say money isn’t the key to happiness. It helps a lot but it’s more about having good friends and family around you.
@@golamas1999 I agree completely. But to me it brings happiness not having to worry about those little things that used to bring stress and anxiety to the picture, having to count every single dollar.
The jump from 100K to 1M is wild to me. Should do this for a family of 4
Edit: I also find it interesting that the most replayed spot on this video is at 40K a year
which billionaire/millionaire is having 4 kids?
@@dusk2308 Lol no a family of 4. 2 adults, 2 kids. And i'm sure there are plenty of millionaires with 4 kids.
You add a wife and you better be making double for the same lifestyle. Yes you share a home. But she's gonna spend you down as much as you let her. Yes this means a couple at the 25k bracket needs roommates still. The reality is that both of the couple work and contribute, so you have 2 people making 25k each and you just barely make it.
EDIT: Add a kid and a 25k couple might as well die.
Hallelujah!!! I'm favored and blessed with $60,000 every week! Now I can afford anything and also support the work of God and the church.
@@AnnaMiller-u7q Really? Did you also get scammed by Ana Graciela Blackwelder?
Anyone else here obsessed with Secret Pathway To Triumph? It's like discovering a secret treasure map for wealth!
2k+ upvotes and not a single comment? sus
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The fact that the 25k earning is a rich lifestyle in many countries makes the dollar unreal unequal already.
This was scarily accurate for the 40k and 100k brackets - the mortgage for the 100k was spot on ($2300 before any HOA), and the “can get by but doesn’t really have any extra money” for the $40k
Choices. That 40-100k earner can live in the the same place they did as a student (unless it was their parents basement). There is no rule that says you are entitled to an overpriced house and overpriced car because you earn a certain amount. People have lifestyle creep that advances faster than their earning potential. I have played that game, it is mostly self imposed limitations.
@@Miner-dyne Yea but none of these examples have children. Imagine raising a child in a 1 bdr apartment. I agree it isn't perfect, but it shows what is a reality for many.
"What can I say, I'm Robert, I'm an eccentric boy" 🤣🤣🤣
Excellent video
Would be interested in a future version if this video that covers a bracket or two between $100k and $1m, and with a typical family with 2 kids.
I like how your voice and attitude changes based on the income class.
You missed a trick for the mortgage at the $25 million bracket, which highlights how broken the system is. Because you have so much money, a bank will loan you the $15 million at a low interest rate because they know you're good for the money. You can then use that loan to invest in the stock market, which, even at a low-risk investment strategy, will have a higher return than the bank's interest rate over the time you repay the mortgage. So you make more money and have a $15 million asset when everything is said and done.
That's what Adele did apparently!
Not to mention the appreciation on the house :)
And even in a downturn you are probably hedged and it doesn’t even affect you :P
That's basically what you do with any kind of high net value asset, including stocks. Another thing I learned while workinh in finance is the bank would give basically close to 0% interest loans to high networth individuals as long as they kept a balance in their account (because the bank would turn around and invest that money and give them back some of the earned gains, keep the rest for themselves). Money's funny like that, the more you have the less expensive things actually get ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
But stocks are shit, and no one predicts crashes. 😂😂😂
@@verb0ze oh poor people,,I feel their struggles... actually I WOULD really like to feel that type of struggle too
johnny acting more and more like prince charming from shrek the richer he gets is so funny
Bingo!
I used to sell luxury appliances. Some of my clients had two kitchens in their home. A show kitchen with Sub-Zero/Wolf / Viking / Miele appliances and a "dirty" kitchen in the back that they actually used (typically with higher end appliances like Bosch/KitchenAid). These show kitchens are what you see in these multimillion dollar homes.
Fascinating, as someone who likes to cook, i always thought of a kitchen as a working space, not a status symbol. Were the appliances better in the "dirty" kitchen, or did the clients not know about such lowly matters?
@@andreaslind6338 He says higher end like KitchenAid but I never considered KitchenAid to be higher end than Wolf or Viking.
Probably one kitchen for their cooks and one for their own use, people generally enjoy privacy
I live in US city with one kid. My take home has been about $4000 a month for years. 1-bedroom, few bills and rental/car insurance are total of $2500 right now. We are doing well, because health insurance is covered by work, we have free parking, free pool, free gym, utilities included, free food at work, take food home, take the kid to work if needed, short commute. For the last twenty years I was able to invest about $500 a month. At some point the investments are giving me the $4000 a month. What really happened is that I also learned to trade and get great returns on small amounts. Small amounts allow for greater return.
If I earned 100k, let alone 1 million, I'd live like the 40 000$ person.
Exactly this yeah! Spend some of the rest treating yourself every so often
Many do but then throw in marriage, kids, saving for their future etc. Along with general social pressures that force people to keep up with the jone's whether you want to or not e.g. weddings, holidays, events etc. So many people who make $100-$250k often come across like they're the most pressed out of anyone...and many do literally live paycheck to paycheck.
@@d.b.cooper1 I have never gave a crap about buying expensive things, just because people like them or would potentially like me more...
Since I became a software engineer the only thing that has inflated in my life is that now I pay rent, because of course and I go out 2 more times a month than I used to.
@@d.b.cooper1If someone can’t afford kids, they shouldn’t have them.
No one’s forcing you to keep up with the Jones’.
My husband & I both made about $50k/yr each back when we got married. We spent $10k on our wedding.
@@karenwillough180 I was just explaining the situation of an average person. “Can’t afford to have kids” is such a weird subjective thing to say as by that logic if those on 6 figures can’t then how could those on $30k? You make it work. It’s just part of life. I was merely explaining how those on 6 figures often can end up living pay check to check. It wasn’t some personal attack on you lol. Most people do want to start a family & enjoy life while they can.
bro literally used the sound effect of the life points going down in yu-gi-oh hahaha
How did I not notice that until this comment 😅
You know what time it is?
Thank you, I was trying to figure out where I knew that sound from
do you know the name of the sound effect?