The Self-Sufficiency Standard
Questions
- Why does a preschool child add $20,000 to the costs
of a single parent in some parts of California, and far
less in many other places?
- Why are rents so high in California and New York
City? Are the apartments much fancier at the 40th
percentile?
- Why are rents so low in Philadelphia?
- Why are rents higher in places where population
density is high?
- Does the song "New York, New York" talk about life in
a high rent area? ("If you can make it here, you'll make
it anywhere.")
- Who gets the rent money?
- Why do renters at the just-getting-by level pay such
high taxes? They aren't paying property taxes themselves;
those are embedded in their rent. How much of it is
payroll taxes?
- Only in the least expensive counties are people
getting much in the way of tax credit money.
- How many of us lack sufficient income to meet our
most simply defined needs?
- What does the rising price of gas do?
- What will happen to rents in the low-cost counties
when retiring baby boomers with little home equity to
live on move in? Who will benefit from this? Who will be
negatively affected?
- Why are women willing to have a baby, even though
their cost of living rises by $10,000, but reluctant to
marry, even though their cost of living only rises it by
about $7,000, and a husband is likely to bring income of
more than that? (Maybe it is easier to manage on a tight
budget with only one adult, rather than negotiating out
the vicissitudes of tight-budget living with another
adult.)
- Might the large share of people whose incomes are
below or near the Self-Sufficiency Standard — the
just-getting-by level — have some bearing on
divorce rates and the number of single parent
families?
Some answers and links — and probably some more
questions — will be added as time goes on.
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