• Cypher@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    56% of Americans have more than $5000 in savings excluding retirement funds such as 401k.

        • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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          6 days ago

          Thanks for providing a source, but I’m very skeptical of anybody using averages to represent this rather than the median. If you put 99 destitute and homeless people in a room along with Elon Musk the average net worth in that room is over 4 billion dollars, which to put it mildly does not reflect the reality of most people in the room.

          • Cypher@lemmy.world
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            6 days ago

            Doing this by savings brackets actually avoids this problem but I would agree in another scenario.

            If we exclude the top two savings brackets we arrive at 46% of Americans having over $5,000 and under $250,000 in savings outside a 401k.

            Im certain that is a higher percentage of Americans with $5,000 savings than in 1946!

            • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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              6 days ago

              It certainly is higher than in 1946, but not as high as it should be relative to income or purchasing power, which I think is why the meme is effective. Assuming somebody else in this thread was correct when thy said $5k in 1946 is equivalent to $80k today that’s a sixteen-fold difference, but I’m extremely skeptical that the average American is able to save 16x what his great-grandfather did, whereas the price of everything (housing, food, whatever) has increased far more. It isn’t a healthy position for a developed society to be in, especially one without public healthcare. If I were an American and had only $5k in the bank I’d be terrified.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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          6 days ago

          Yes. Averages do paint different pictures than actual hard numbers. And yet the actual hard numbers show the reality of the situation, and that reality is that a lot less than 56% Americans have more than $5000 in savings because that has nothing to do with an average.