Maybe if they got better jobs they wouldn’t be poor

Filed in Uncategorized by on March 21, 2008

An analysis of government data by The Washington Post found that prices have risen 9.2 percent since 2006 for the groceries, gasoline, health care and other basics that a middle-income American family has little choice but to consume. That would cost such a family, which made $45,000 on average in 2006, an extra $972 per year, assuming it did not buy less of such items because of higher prices. For a broad range of goods on which it is easier to scrimp — such as restaurant meals, alcoholic beverages, new cars, furniture, and clothing — prices have risen 2.4 percent.

Wages for typical workers, meanwhile, have been rising slowly. In that same time span, average earnings for a non-managerial worker rose about 5 percent. This contradiction — high inflation for staples, low inflation for luxuries and in wages — helps explain why American workers felt squeezed even before the recent economic distress began.

See just do the math.  If the average American just picked himself up by the bootstraps, stayed in school and didn’t work in a factory job that was being moved to China or Mexico he wouldn’t be a victim to this. 

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  1. Jason O'Neill says:

    Ensuring that every child attains at a minimum a high school is crucial. However, everyone needs to attain at least a two-year degree.

    America takes for granted the opportunities afforded with education.

    The playing field is not level, but having an educated workforce will attract or retain companies that may be exploring opportunites elsewhere. India, China and Eastern Europe where education is taken seriously are where the companies are expanding operations.

    Without education, our country will continue to flounder.