Re: Simple Proof that Gross is wrong
by
GearheadGeek
08/28/2008, 2:23 PM #
First off, if the calculator isn't already taking taxes into account, it's useless. It doesn't list taxes as a line-item, and it doesn't say a word about whether taxes are used. Bankrate.com has a similar calculator that specifies that taxes are NOT considered, but it assumes you're owning a $1.1M home in NYC, which throws things off a little. Bankrate's numbers are 10% higher than CNN's for my city vs. NYC, but both equate $250k in NYC with $100k or more here, and I live very well in a nice house in a nice neighborhood near schools, museums and good restaurants on significantly less than that.
One of the places both calculators seem to be way off on is transportation... I'm thinking they may have been created before gas in "cheap gas" Texas was averaging $3.61/gallon, because subway fare both ways at what, $2.00/trip is way cheaper than the only viable option in most of Texas, driving in traffic. If the average commute is 10 miles at 20 mpg (it's longer and in traffic most cars are getting less) it's nearly even just on the cost of fuel, and there are lots of other costs that go into owning/maintaining a car.
At $100k/yr here (the CNN number) or $109k/year (the BankRate number) I'd be able to save a LOT, and I'm saving pretty well as it is, even with my partner in medical school. Maybe someday, when we've paid off HIS grad-school loans, I'll be claiming that our 5x-median+ income isn't really all that much, but I hope I haven't lost sight of how well we're living on less than 2x the median.