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by cik
1911 days ago
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That's exceptionally untrue - though it can be true in context. In the city beside mine, renting a place downtown, and working in the grocery store it's very possible to save $500 per month. For reference, minimum wage is the equivalent of $1700 USD, and renting a one-bedroom, all in will cost roughly $454 USD. With cellphone (250GB of 5G speeds) costing the equivalent of $15 USD, and groceries and electricity costing another $350, there's still plenty of space. Investing that money in the S&P at its historical rate, for 45 years will yield $2.3 million (rounded down). Now, quality of life would be rubbish. But it's technically possible. |
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So crying "this doesn't apply to people with really low incomes" is true to an extent, but that's only a fraction of the population. Going around saying "well, you shouldn't give that advice because it doesn't apply to everyone, it only applies to most people" is insane.
[1] https://www.census.gov/library/publications/2020/demo/p60-27...).