the road to hana wrote:harmony wrote:DonBradley wrote:I don't know.
However, two things that I have read come to mind:
First, studies show that Mormons are statistically much less likely to live in poverty than are members of the non-Mormon population. (Indeed, the sociologists who wrote On Being Poor in Utah concluded that Mormonism as a whole functioned on the economic level as "an anti-poverty program.)
Second, Utah is the most economically egalitarian state in the Union. Variations in wealth are less extreme here in Zion than they are anywhere else.
Together, these observations lead to another, which should be quite uncontroversial: Mormonism tends to make its adherents middle class, not poor, not truly wealthy, but solidly middle class.
Don
Except for the bankruptcies. Can one be solidly middle class and be bankrupt?
I think there's plenty of poverty in Mormonism, and not just in third-world countries. There's plenty of wealth, including great wealth, in Mormonism, too. I think that the latter has a tendency to offset the former when trying to determine an "average" LDS household income.
I didn't say there wasn't "plenty" of either, but your cherry-picking of this term refuses to engage what I did say: that, statistically, Latter-day Saints have less poverty than non-Latter-day Saints, and that Utah is the most economically egalitarian state in the Union. I'll adduce my data if you'll promise to adduce your data to the contrary.
As to bankruptcies, Harmony, actually, yes, someone could go bankrupt and remain very much middle class. The comment suggests an naïvété about what "middle class" means and what "bankruptcy" means. Persons going bankrupt can quite easily continue to live in their suburban homes, receive their middle class salaries, and pursue middle class lifestyles.
But this does bring up another question. Why is bankruptcy so common in Utah? Go to RfM, and you'll learn that it's because of tithing and a host of other evils of Mormonism. Go to the research data on who goes bankrupt and why, and you'll find that the strongest predictor of a bankruptcy filing is having children. Need I say more?
Don