The Atlantic

$350,000 a Year, and Just Getting By

Financial confessionals reveal that income inequality and geographic inequality have normalized absurd spending patterns.
Source: Paul Taylor / Getty

The hypothetical couple were making $350,000 a year and just getting by, their income “barely” qualifying them as middle-class. Their budget, posted in September, showed how they “survived” in a city like San Francisco, spending more than $50,000 a year on child care and preschool, nearly $50,000 a year on their mortgage, and hefty amounts on vacations, entertainment, and a weekly date night—even as they saved for retirement and college in tax-advantaged accounts.

The internet, being the internet, responded with some combination of howling, baying, pitchfork-jostling, and scoffing. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York quipped that the thing the family was struggling with . Gabriel Zucman, a leading scholar of, while noting that it showed how much money consumption taxes could raise.

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