This is really the key question - Can a median income earner today afford a lifestyle that is comparable to that of a median income earner in the past? I would argue that they can. The problem is that the lifestyle that median earner is trying to live today is far more luxurious than their counterparts in the past.
True, I can afford much more luxurious vacations than middle class generation ago, but if I completely forego those, that won't make enough difference to buy a house in Bronx (2-3 million in my area), and taxes and maintenance on top of that. So it would be wrong to say that I cannot afford to buy a basic house because I choose luxuries like coffee, nice lunches out and vacations. My older friend's mother raised their family as a single mom in a 3 br apartment on upper west side that she bought and paid off working in the laundromat! They had no vacations, but she could afford 3 br in the city as a laundry worker. If I never drink coffee again, buying apartment like that in Manhattan would still be a financial insanity.
So yes, I buy lattes every morning, but I put more into my child's college fund every month than I spend on all my coffee/work lunches. And I feel I had to do it from the day he was born, and we are still not secure that we will have enough to afford him decent education. You could work your way through college when baby boomers were getting their degrees. They did not have to worry about those things as much.
Things like that...
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