It's nontrivial to find economic statistics from more than a few years before 1970, but the ratio of the median home price to the median household income has increased substantially since then - maybe homeownership rates were lower, but homeownership was still more affordable.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Thu Nov 11, 2021 9:36 pm When your grandfather was most likely a young man home ownership (and car-ownership) rates were lower than they are now, people used less energy and spent a larger portion of their income on food.
If you buy the analysis of noted far-right extremist Elizabeth Warren, household income gains in the last few decades have been outpaced by the costs of necessary positional goods.
Where did "master plumber" come from?No doubt a lot of people think their grandpa just had a "regular job," either because we underestimate just how high up the value-added ladder jobs like "master plumber" were in the pre-digital age,
At what point was the median American unemployed?An actual "regular" guy would be chronically unemployed, always on the edge of not having sufficient clothing or fuel or food, and shivering in a tiny GI bill Cape Cod that didn't sell for half a mil because it was demolished years ago.