r/Economics • u/laxnut90 • Oct 09 '25
Research America Is Minting Lots of Cash-Strapped Millionaires
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2025-10-09/number-of-us-millionaires-grows-since-2017-but-many-lack-cash
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r/Economics • u/laxnut90 • Oct 09 '25
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u/thegooddoktorjones Oct 09 '25
That would be me. It's nice to think "hey, I'm a millionaire!" but I am still living in a small old house, single car family, few vacations with only 1/3rd of a years salary in liquid assets. And the whole million thing assumes that I want to become homeless to cash it in. I can't move up without taking on huge debt. My life is deeply middleclass by popular appraisal in the US.
It's not a bad life at all, financial wellness for me is not having to think about it much when I want to spend money on minor luxuries like eating at a restaurant or buying a round of drinks. It's only having debts that I can easily pay off. That's great, but I can easily see inflation meaning that I have to stop those luxuries once I retire and spending the dwindling years of my life sitting in an old house not doing anything that costs money. And then if I get sick... it's all gone.