by Charles Mudede Art Wager/gettyimages.com
The Pew Research Center sees three class forms in the US: upper-income, middle-income, and lower-income. The first group it calls "rich," and the last "poor." To be in the first group, one needs to earn twice the median household income in a given area. Zosha Millman of the Seattle PI applied this system of classification and calculation on the Seattle area, which has a median income of $74,458, and determined that a person needed to earn $148,916 to b
The Pew Research Center sees three class forms in the US: upper-income, middle-income, and lower-income. The first group it calls "rich," and the last "poor." To be in the first group, one needs to earn twice the median household income in a given area. Zosha Millman of the Seattle PI applied this system of classification and calculation on the Seattle area, which has a median income of $74,458, and determined that a person needed to earn $148,916 to b