Nearly half means not half, so that's better than 50/50 odds to not be living paycheck to paycheck. That's not really that lucky, statistically speaking
How does that not still make the statement in the meme true? Because I think it still does. If you're not living paycheck-to-paycheck it doesn't mean you are able to amass $5000 in savings, it means you're not at risk of going into debt (or at least more debt than you're probably in thanks to things like student loans).
Lots of people are able to "save" $10k per year, depending on your definition of savings (for example, putting it into a retirement fund) but anyone who thinks they are well-off because of it don't realize where they stand on the class ladder. If you continue to stash away that ten grand every year it'll take you 42 million years to match Elon Musk's current net worth. That's so long ago that the Eurasian landmass was still a blob of disconnected islands.
Plenty of workers can save that money in 5 months. I don't even think that someone need a high paying job for that, depending on your expenses. Problem is that that money buys you little nowadays.
What's that? No even a 1% of an average house anyways.
See my link about half of Americans living paycheck-to-paycheck and then realize that plenty of the ones that aren't have stuff they want to spend the remaining money on to make their lives less miserable like entertainment.
Is it possible? Maybe. Is it healthy for your mental state? Probably not in a lot of the other half of Americans who can afford to save anything at all.
The only idea that comes to mind is working for the mining industry in Austalia. My cousin's husband was a carpenter there and apparently made bank. Although from the stories they told me, most would not save a significant portion. Apparently they tend to work 14 days on, 14 days off or in similar arrangements, and be flown in and out around their shifts. A significant portion of their colleagues would choose to fly to Bali instead of their respective Australian cities, spend their 14 days off there and immediately use up their wages. Weird lifestyle overall.
12k a year - gets really depressing when you realize how many years it takes to buy a house, and in America how many years a small medical event costs you.
I think it's wealthier than half the country. Far more than half, in fact. Because plenty of the people who aren't living paycheck-to-paycheck still want to do things like go out to eat a couple of times a month or buy the latest games just so their lives aren't totally miserable, so they aren't able to save up $5000 either.
The number of people on lemmy who are apparently dirt poor and don’t comprehend money or the economy is ridiculous.
Anything short of declaring yourself a homeless disabled pensioner eating rats to survive will get hostile responses around here, and even then someone would claim rats are a luxury.
No, the downvotes are for being tone-deaf and contributing nothing of value to the conversation. Lots of us here are perfectly able to save that much and more, but that doesn't change the fact that far too many cannot.
Forbes paints a different picture if you simply take the average across the available generations (which is what I did) and I have the impression they would be far more accurate.
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.
Breaking it down by generations still does not change the fact that a lot less than 56% of Americans have more than $5000 in their savings accounts. Maybe more of certain generations do, but that's not what you said.