Why Is the Cost of Living so Unaffordable?

higher educationCharles Hugh Smith – The mainstream narrative is “the problem is low wages.” Actually, the problem is the soaring cost of living. If essentials such as healthcare, housing, higher education and government services were as cheap as they once were, a wage of $10 or $12 an hour would be more than enough to maintain a decent everyday life.

Here are some examples from the real world. In 1952, it cost $30 to have a baby in an excellent hospital. If we adjust that by official inflation as measured by the Bureau of Labor Statistic’s inflation calculator to 2017, the cost would be $275. ($1 in 1952 = $9.16 in 2017).

What does it cost to have a baby delivered in a hospital today? $5,000? $10,000? Who even knows, given the convoluted billing process in today’s sickcare system?

The pharmaceutical cartel jacks up medication costs per dose from $3 tp $600, even when the medication has been around for decades: the Pinworm prescription jumps from $3 to up to $600 a pill Parents, doctors angry over drug price gouging (via John F.)

My father paid 1.8% of his wages for “hospital group insurance” in the early 1950s (for a household of four kids and two adults.) For someone earning $1,000 a week, the equivalent today would be $72 a month out of a monthly gross income of $4,000.

My spouse and I pay $1330 a month for barebones healthcare insurance in today’s sickcare system. Factor out subsidies paid by the employer or state, and minimal healthcare insurance costs tens of thousands of dollars per household annually.

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The Self-Serving Apologists for Student Debt-Serfdom

degreesCharles Hugh Smith – Everyone who isn’t blinded by self-interest sees that the cost of higher education in America–and the way we pay for it, by turning students into debt-serfs– is unsustainable. Those benefiting richly from the bloated, ineffective bureaucracy see no alternative, of cours27e; their self-serving handwringing would be laughable if it wasn’t so destructive to the nation and the economy.

Greg Mankiw, professor at Harvard, recently offered up a typical helping of self-serving handwringing:  Three Reasons for Those Hefty College Tuition Bills. Mankiw squeezes out a few insincere (but necessary for PR purposes) alligator tears over the soaring costs of a college degree, and then trots out the usual justifications for maintaining the status quo, which just so happens to reward him so well.

Let’s dismantle his bogus justifications one by one.

1. Mankiw predictably trots out the Gold Standard of justifying the absurdly high cost of an often-ineffective and useless college degree: those with college degrees earn $1.5 million more over a lifetime of work than those without degrees.

On the face of it, this offers plenty of justification for $120,000 piles of debt for degrees in Critical Studies, etc.: that extra $1.5 million will easily fund the cost of a 4-year degree.

But this data is completely out of date. Yes, a college degree offered substantial lifetime wage increases back when four years of college cost about as much as a new car, not a new house, i.e. the current cost; but as recent graduates have discovered, a four-year college degree offers little advantage, and substantially under-performs journey-person wages for skilled trades workers such as pipefitters, plumbers, etc. Continue reading

Accounting Tricks And Tips

Accounting is a popular career choice, due to being in such high demand and entailing excellent financial prospects. It offers tremendous job stability, employing over 1,275,000 people nationwide. With a median income of $63,550 per year, and a projected growth rate of 13 percent over the next decade, it’s obvious why so many people turn to accounting as a lifelong profession. Accounting offers not only a stable job, but also the opportunity to grow and advance within the industry. By implementing a few basic tools into your daily job performance, you can increase your likelihood of getting a raise or promotion.

Pursue Higher Education

Education is pivotal in today’s workforce. If you seek to move up in your current job, you must first ensure you have the necessary credentials to warrant greater responsibility. If you’ve only earned your bachelor’s, consider pursuing a master’s. Possessing a master’s in accounting is essential if you hope to substantiate your qualifications and rise in the field.

Go Above and Beyond

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Image via Flickr by kenteegardin

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