Interesting charts from Bloomberg this morning focusing on the upper end of the middle class.
This is a weird way to break it out, but it's kind of a trip.
In the last 30 years:
Share of total US wealth owned by the upper 1% has increased 13%.
Share of total US wealth owned by the next 9% has increased 4%.
Share of total US wealth owned by the 50th-90th percentile decreased 17%.
Share of total US wealth owned by the bottom 50% decreased 68%!
Ouch.
But in nominal, not relative, terms, the Upper Middle Class lost the most money.
Meanwhile, the upper middle class has almost totally lost all business equity of all kinds from shares in mutual funds to non-corporate small business equity:
This one shocked me. Every person in the 50th-90th percentiles added together only own about an eighth of total US business equity. The other 7/8ths all belongs to the top 10% now. I would have figured 401(k)s with standard set-ups alone would have put a bit better number on that, even though I know 401(k)s have been a huge policy failure. The 50th-90th percentile's share of total US business equity in the last 30 years has decreased by 45%!
Worse still? Beyond equity, in the last 10 years, the debt composition of the upper middle class has changed pretty sharply:
Much more debt is held in auto and student loans. We all knew that already. And much less debt is held in mortgages. We knew that too. Young people have lots of student loans and are the least likely Americans to be able to own their own homes in a hundred years. But figures like this tell me even more. The share of mortgage debt owed by the upper middle class (defined as 50th-90th percentile) has decreased 17% in the past 10 years. Meanwhile the share of student loan debt has increased 102%, and the share of auto loan debt has increased 91%. In just 10 years! The auto debt is shocking. I knew we had big big growth in subprime auto loans. I did not realize the extent to which those in the top half of the middle class leveraged themselves for cars. I mean, it just exploded.
Lots of stories on student loans. Not so many on auto. Pretty sure the consensus around here is that the smart amount of a car to finance is 0%. Mortgages are a bit different in my mind. You gotta live somewhere. So the trade-off's different. So is the equity picture. Keep up with a home, and it's not going to be a great earner, but it will be worth something. Most cars rapidly depreciate to 0.
It's not mentioned often, but property taxes are also increasing significantly faster than top-line inflation--like everything else that can't be outsourced to low-wage countries. So this is another thing putting the squeeze on both mortgages and rents.
Meanwhile, wage growth for the 50th-90th percent does not beat inflation. It's 2%-3%, just like inflation. Completely flatlined since the great recession.
And the icing on the cake? Interest rates are up. Investors have found a way to seek better return off the upper middle class, even if wages have flatlined. 1. Shift the credit profile of the upper middle class toward higher interest loan types, and 2. charge them higher interest rates for existing loan types. So an increasing share of wages goes to rents, property tax, healthcare, and debt service than ever before. And beyond that, credit card interest rates are now as high as the late 1970s, only with inflation much, much lower, the real costs of credit card debt have never been higher:
The professional class is getting totally wrecked.
This is a weird way to break it out, but it's kind of a trip.
In the last 30 years:
Share of total US wealth owned by the upper 1% has increased 13%.
Share of total US wealth owned by the next 9% has increased 4%.
Share of total US wealth owned by the 50th-90th percentile decreased 17%.
Share of total US wealth owned by the bottom 50% decreased 68%!
Ouch.
But in nominal, not relative, terms, the Upper Middle Class lost the most money.
Meanwhile, the upper middle class has almost totally lost all business equity of all kinds from shares in mutual funds to non-corporate small business equity:
This one shocked me. Every person in the 50th-90th percentiles added together only own about an eighth of total US business equity. The other 7/8ths all belongs to the top 10% now. I would have figured 401(k)s with standard set-ups alone would have put a bit better number on that, even though I know 401(k)s have been a huge policy failure. The 50th-90th percentile's share of total US business equity in the last 30 years has decreased by 45%!
Worse still? Beyond equity, in the last 10 years, the debt composition of the upper middle class has changed pretty sharply:
Much more debt is held in auto and student loans. We all knew that already. And much less debt is held in mortgages. We knew that too. Young people have lots of student loans and are the least likely Americans to be able to own their own homes in a hundred years. But figures like this tell me even more. The share of mortgage debt owed by the upper middle class (defined as 50th-90th percentile) has decreased 17% in the past 10 years. Meanwhile the share of student loan debt has increased 102%, and the share of auto loan debt has increased 91%. In just 10 years! The auto debt is shocking. I knew we had big big growth in subprime auto loans. I did not realize the extent to which those in the top half of the middle class leveraged themselves for cars. I mean, it just exploded.
Lots of stories on student loans. Not so many on auto. Pretty sure the consensus around here is that the smart amount of a car to finance is 0%. Mortgages are a bit different in my mind. You gotta live somewhere. So the trade-off's different. So is the equity picture. Keep up with a home, and it's not going to be a great earner, but it will be worth something. Most cars rapidly depreciate to 0.
It's not mentioned often, but property taxes are also increasing significantly faster than top-line inflation--like everything else that can't be outsourced to low-wage countries. So this is another thing putting the squeeze on both mortgages and rents.
Meanwhile, wage growth for the 50th-90th percent does not beat inflation. It's 2%-3%, just like inflation. Completely flatlined since the great recession.
And the icing on the cake? Interest rates are up. Investors have found a way to seek better return off the upper middle class, even if wages have flatlined. 1. Shift the credit profile of the upper middle class toward higher interest loan types, and 2. charge them higher interest rates for existing loan types. So an increasing share of wages goes to rents, property tax, healthcare, and debt service than ever before. And beyond that, credit card interest rates are now as high as the late 1970s, only with inflation much, much lower, the real costs of credit card debt have never been higher:
The professional class is getting totally wrecked.
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