honorentheos wrote:
According to research from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in order to get the standard of living that ordinary Americans enjoyed in 1975, today we would only have to work 23 weeks out of the year. To achieve 1950s standard of living now requires a mere 11 weeks of work! People were fairly content back then. In fact, many who complain that the free market has failed us point to those decades as America's golden age. This is an illusion, of course. Most of us make the choice to work more and acquire a significantly better living standard. Yet, few people realize and appreciate how very much more we have now.
Put simply, it's saying your 40 hour work week today is getting you a lot more than the average work week in the '50's afforded. The comment in the article is pointing out people lived with less back then, were content if most likely because they perceived it as living quite well compared to how we'd perceive living life that way today, and most of us don't realize how much life has changed for the average person in the United States over the last 60-70 years. It touches on both sides of your question, pointing out that the average family today has the benefits of technologies making their lives easier that were science fiction at best in these eras people imagine to be the golden years of American civilization. Within the statement, "To achieve 1950s standard of living now requires a mere 11 weeks of work!" is the fact the average person in the 1950's didn't own a television, maybe owned a single car shared by the family, may not have owned a refrigerator or washing machine, likely lived in a family with more kids than we do today, had a stay at home mom whose full-time job was to do the things most of us use machines to do today. The average home was less than 1000 sq. ft. Today we'd say the person living like the average person in the '50s was living in poverty.
It has nothing to do with cheap goods from China.
Honorentheos,
I am truly puzzled by this picture, it strikes me as profoundly warped. How could such things be said?
First I do not really hear people saying free enterprise has failed us.
This picture of the 50s is bizarre. I was there living in a modest neighborhood. People had homes car television washingmachine refrigerators etc. Yes they did not have computers and the tv was smaller. Some homes would be under 1000 ft but at least in the areas I was familiar with most were definatly larger.
What might matter is whose wage could live comfortably from 11 weeks work? Does this mean current wages or just upper middle class wages?Sure minimum wage was dollar and quarter hour now ten dollars or so. Then you could buy a home for 16000 then which now costs like 250,000.
The comment about food assistance rules getting looser and looser to cost more s might be true compared to 1955 but not for the past 35 years.
The federal deficit is expanded more by tax cuts and wars. Blaming food assistance is a sure political tell.(or is it views shaped by membership in upper income groups?)
I think that despite cheap electronics there are a sizeable number of people these days seriously troubled by the high price of housing. People are staying in tent Hoovervilles or their parents basement.