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Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
Income Confusion: Part II
by Thomas Sowell
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When most of us look at income statistics, we are not just being numbers junkies. We want to find out something about actual flesh-and-blood human beings -- specifically what their standard of living is like.

But you cannot always just take statistics at face value -- or, worse yet, with the spin that politicians and the media put on them.

Income, for example, is not the same as earnings, and neither is the same as the economic resources on which people's standard of living is based.

Since most of us get our income by earning it, it might seem that any difference between income and earnings would just be some technicality that only economists or accountants would bother with.

In reality, the difference can be huge, depending on the income bracket and the age of the individual.

Most of the income received by people 65 years old and up is not counted statistically as earnings. Only 24 percent of their incomes are earnings. Most of their incomes are from pensions or other sources known as "unearned income," such as returns on investments.

It should hardly be surprising that people who have been around a long time would have accumulated more money in the bank and maybe have a little nest egg in a mutual fund, each of which provides a stream of income during their retirement years, even if that income does not get counted as earnings.

Despite a drumbeat of political rhetoric depicting the elderly as being in dire economic conditions, the actual incomes of the elderly are more than four times what their earnings statistics might suggest -- or what politicians can claim, citing those statistics.

When it comes to wealth, the average net worth of people 65 years old and up is several times that of people under the age of 45. The highest average net worth in any age bracket belongs to households headed by people aged 70 to 74.

Although income is often confused with wealth, as when people currently in high income brackets are referred to as "rich," the elderly average lower income than middle-aged people, but more wealth.

Since 80 percent of the people who are 65 and up are either homeowners or home buyers, their housing costs tend to be lower. Among those 80 percent, their median monthly housing costs in 2001 averaged just $339 a month. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Taxes on Net Worth P2
As for AudiR10's comments about the service sector, I'm with her on that, because that's what I do for a living. I provide phone tech support for cable internet and digital phone. If you think that doesn't take brains and a lot of soft skills to defuse the often very upset or angry Angelinos we serve, think again.

That's not to disparage the manufacturing sector, though. The problem with manufacturing anything in this country really is the horrendous maze of regulations, to say nothing of the minimum-wage laws and the union bosses who are clueless when it comes to economics.

Which brings us back to the point of the article and this thread--that we need to make economics a required subject from kindergarten on up.

While we're at it, we should also find a way to help kids learn how to process grief properly and not get stuck on anger, no matter how disfunctional their families are.

Oh well, I can always dream on...

Taxes on Net Worth... P1
...would be a disaster because anyone with any net worth and any sense would leave the country as quickly as they could. I know I would.

Besides, the capital gains tax IS a tax on net worth. The dims are already talking about increasing the tax rate dramatically on that, which will cut the amount of revenue gained from it just as dramatically.

I like the idea of one of the earlier posters that we insist that everyone who wants to vote or run for public office prove they understand the principles of economics. Making them read one or more of Dr. Sowell's books on economics would be a good start.

Of course, you'd also have to screen candidates and voters for their degree of non-normie-ism (see http://www.non-normie.com) and forbid anyone with a score higher than 30% from voting or running for office, or being hired for any job without proof of ongoing attendance at either an AA group or an Al-Anon or Ala-Teen group. Maybe then we could stem the rising tide of destruction wrought by folks who never learned how to process grief and got stuck on anger (and therefore on stupid).

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