It’s a hand-to-mouth existence when you make less than $300k

WTF?  I can almost hear you say.  Well, apparently a University of Chicago law professor who, together with his doctor wife, earns that much EVERY FRIGGIN YEAR, has some tough choices to make, given the possibility of Obama raising taxes:  should I fire the nanny?  the gardener?  the maid?  make the kids go to public schools?  These are hard choices, you understand?

Anyway, for the entire article, click here.  Let’s get together for a little road trip to teach this family just what hardship constitutes.

With many thanks to CW for this:  His original blog entry, from google cache:

Quote:

We are the Super Rich « Truth on the Market: Posted on September 15, 2010

The rhetoric in Washington about taxes is about millionaires and the super rich, but the relevant dividing line between millionaires and the middle class is pegged at family income of $250,000. (I’m not a math professor, but last time I checked $250,000 is less than $1 million.) That makes me super rich and subject to a big tax hike if the president has his way.

I’m the president’s neighbor in Chicago, but we’ve never met. I wish we could, because I would introduce him to my family and our lifestyle, one he believes is capable of financing the vast expansion of government he is planning. A quick look at our family budget, which I will happily share with the White House, will show him that like many Americans, we are just getting by despite seeming to be rich. We aren’t.

I, like the president before me, am a law professor at the University of Chicago Law School, and my wife, like the first lady before her, works at the University of Chicago Hospitals, where she is a doctor who treats children with cancer. Our combined income exceeds the $250,000 threshold for the super rich (but not by that much), and the president plans on raising my taxes. After all, we can afford it, and the world we are now living in has that familiar Marxian tone of those who need take and those who can afford it pay. The problem is, we can’t afford it. Here is why.

The biggest expense for us is financing government. Last year, my wife and I paid nearly $100,000 in federal and state taxes, not even including sales and other taxes. This amount is so high because we can’t afford fancy accountants and lawyers to help us evade taxes and we are penalized by the tax code because we choose to be married and we both work outside the home. (If my wife and I divorced or were never married, the government would write us a check for tens of thousands of dollars. Talk about perverse incentives.)

Our next biggest expense, like most people, is our mortgage. Homes near our work in Chicago aren’t cheap and we do not have friends who were willing to help us finance the deal. We chose to invest in the University community and renovate and old property, but we did so at an inopportune time.

We pay about $15,000 in property taxes, about half of which goes to fund public education in Chicago. Since we care the education of our three children, this means we also have to pay to send them to private school. My wife has school loans of nearly $250,000 and I do too, although becoming a lawyer is significantly cheaper. We try to invest in our retirement by putting some money in the stock market, something that these days sounds like a patriotic act. Our account isn’t worth much, and is worth a lot less than it used to be.

Like most working Americans, insurance, doctors’ bills, utilities, two cars, daycare, groceries, gasoline, cell phones, and cable TV (no movie channels) round out our monthly expenses. We also have someone who cuts our grass, cleans our house, and watches our new baby so we can both work outside the home. At the end of all this, we have less than a few hundred dollars per month of discretionary income. We occasionally eat out but with a baby sitter, these nights take a toll on our budget. Life in America is wonderful, but expensive.

If our taxes rise significantly, as they seem likely to, we can cut back on some things. The (legal) immigrant from Mexico who owns the lawn service we employ will suffer, as will the (legal) immigrant from Poland who cleans our house a few times a month. We can cancel our cell phones and some cable channels, as well as take our daughter from her art class at the community art center, but these are only a few hundred dollars per month in total. But more importantly, what is the theory under which collecting this money in taxes and deciding in Washington how to spend it is superior to our decisions? Ask the entrepreneurs we employ and the new arrivals they employ in turn whether they prefer to work for us or get a government handout.

If these cuts don’t work, we will sell our house – into an already spiraling market of declining asset values – and our cars, assuming someone will buy them. The irony here, of course, is that the government is working to save both of these industries despite the impact that increasing taxes will have.
The problem with the president’s plan is that the super rich don’t pay taxes – they hide in the Cayman Islands or use fancy investment vehicles to shelter their income. We aren’t rich enough to afford this – I use Turbo Tax. But we are rich enough to be hurt by the president’s plan. The next time the president comes home to Chicago, he has a standing invitation to come to my house (two blocks from his) and judge for himself whether the Xxxxxxxxxs are as rich as he thinks.

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3 thoughts on “It’s a hand-to-mouth existence when you make less than $300k

  1. It’s so hard when your wife has to stop getting those spa treatments or God forbid the children should have to go to public school. I know, I’ll write a blog that will get Obama’s attention, and then he will give us the tax relief we are looking for. That’s what my professors taught me at the overpriced Ivy league school that I got into a mother load of debt for. Poor me. I mean, I need my overpriced, overextended house and maid to clean it all. Oh wait, she doesn’t clean up Internet messes. I’m out of money, I can’t hire anyone else.

    • Sue, my point exactly with the whole blog – this man has no common sense. There are some wonderful socioeconomic studies out there showing how people tend to confuse needs and wants (my conclusions) and how a housekeeper or private school or anything, actually, becomes justified: We work too many hours to maintain our home, lawn; the public schools here are terrible, etc. While everything in life is a trade-off, sitting down with a piece of paper and actually calculating the price you pay is useful. In other words, our house is close to work so there’s no commute (but it needs a lot of work, the taxes are high and public schools not so good) vs a similar home in suburbs or other urban neighborhood with better schools and lower taxes. Simplified, they choose convenient location over common sense.

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