Originally posted by peggyfromwastate
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However, all that said, there's a big difference between $8-10K dropping into your checking account every month and $20-40K showing up there. Even paying 15 times more (seriously) in taxes and having additional expenses, there is still a lot more money sloshing around. You can save up for a new SUV in a couple of months. If you blow $10K on a vacation, you're not paying for it the rest of the year etc.
The funny thing about the term "middle class" is that EVERYONE and I mean EVERYONE thinks they're middle class. Nobody wants to be poor, and if you use terms like "rich" or "wealthy" instead of "comfortable" nobody wants to be thought of as rich either. It has this negative connotation of "filthy rich." I have two-physician couples making $600-800K who think of themselve as "middle class." But you know what? They're not. Take a look at the numbers.
10th % = $~15K
50th % = $50-55K
75th % = $90-95K
90th % = $145-$150K
95th % = $190-$195K
98th % = $250K
If you are generous and call the 10th percentile to the 90th percentile the "middle class", then you can see a military doctor is "middle class" and a typical civilian physician income of $200-400K is easily top 5%, and perhaps even top 1%. I'm sorry, but that's not middle class, even though your ER doc dad told you it was just like I tell my kids (3 of them, oldest was turning 6 when I left the military) it is. All these words are loaded due to societal expectations, but I'm trying to use them in their strict dictionary definitions. I certainly don't mean to imply anything about your or insult you. I'm not sure what your definition of "uber-rich" is, but I imagine I probably don't meet it. My income is quite typical for a civilian emergency doc.
I think there is a misconception out there that financial planning is somehow all about scrimping and saving now in hopes of some bright future down the road. I see it differently. I see it as a way to make sure you're spending your limited money (and our money is all limited, no matter how much we make) on those things that will bring us the most happiness and joy now and later. Moderation in all things. I recommend a typical civilian doc save 20% of his or her gross income and BLOW THE REST on whatever makes him or her happy. Obviously, however, sacrificing future happiness for current happiness isn't a good formula, and that's what supporting a lifestyle with debt, or not saving at all, is often (but not always) doing. As I frequently tell the medical students who come over for "dinner with a doc", if you can't live on $200K a year, you have a spending problem, not an earning problem. They all laugh because the truth of that statement is so obvious. But it isn't obvious at all to a couple 10 years out of residency, making two car payments, still paying on student loans, with a million dollar mortgage trying to figure out how to live on $400K a year. Oh, and I assure you the "doctor lifestyle" stereotype is very much alive and well. You lived it as a kid so you know it isn't quite what society thinks it is, although it is still a comfortable life. While you didn't have new cars, you probably never went to bed hungry, at least when you were behaving yourself.
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