Life may begin at 40, according to any number of Hallmark cards, but by 45, your chances of ever landing a major raise are pretty much dead. At least, that's one of the many takeaways from a recent paper by a group of Federal Reserve researchers in Minneapolis and New York, who used a massive trove of Social Security Administration data dating back to 1978 to analyze how men's earnings evolve over time.
For the rich and poor alike, the economists found that "the bulk of earnings growth" happens in the first 10 years of work, typically between the ages of 25 and 35. During the next decade of their career, men can expect smaller raises overall. After 45, those in the bottom 90 percent of lifetime earners see their earnings decline as a group, in part because people often start cutting back their hours around that time, especially if they do manual labor for a living. Meanwhile, even 1 percenters only see relatively minor pay bumps after middle age.
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For the visually inclined, here are those trends graphed. On the x-axis, you have where each man falls on the income distribution based on his lifetime earnings. On the y-axis, you have earnings increases during each decade of life. Again, note that most of the growth happens during the first 10 years in the working world (the blue line).
Here's another, perhaps simpler, way of looking at the trend, from a related paper released earlier this year based on the same dataset. For the super-rich (0.1 percent), rich (1 percent), and the rest (99 percent), income basically plateaus after the early-40s.
Of course, we're only talking about averages. There are people out there who have late-age renaissances and start earning like never before. But most of us are not Louis C.K. We set up our careers by our mid-30s, either by working up through the ranks of a company or going to school to position ourselves for a pay bump once we have our fancy degree. By middle age, we pretty much are what we are, professionally. Or, as Schopenhauersupposedly said: "The first forty years of life give us the text; the next thirty supply the commentary."
Well. Shoot. I turn 45 in two weeks. Unless I win the lottery I guess it aint gonna happen.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
Yep, the chart is correct if based on my life. My income is high and quite frankly I don't need anymore. One peaks in their career potential in their late 40's. Unless you open your own business, your career growth is pretty much at a standstill. I am in the savings years. Problem is I want to change jobs, want something more challenging and closer to home, willing to work for less but potential employers are leery of that. If I stay on my current path, I will retire nicely, not wealthy, but not worrying either. But I don't want to retire anytime soon, I want the challenge.
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Sometimes you're the windshield, and sometimes you're the bug.
IMHO, we put way to much value on financial wealth when we should be investing in family (emotional) wealth.
Our grand kids give us way more then money could ever buy. You can't buy true love and devotion.
We are asset rich, money poor and emotionally wealthy. I'm good with that.
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I drink coffee so I don't kill you.
I quilt so I don't kill you.
Do you see a theme?
Faith isn't something that keeps bad things from happening. Faith is what helps us get through bad things when they do happen.
IMHO, we put way to much value on financial wealth when we should be investing in family (emotional) wealth. Our grand kids give us way more then money could ever buy. You can't buy true love and devotion. We are asset rich, money poor and emotionally wealthy. I'm good with that.
Amen!
I wish we didn't have to worry about making the mortgage, but it's our own fault.
I love my husband, my job & I have good friends. I am so proud of my boys.
the survey seems geared to corporate employees--we've been on quite a different track--also, depends on your particular definition of wealth--each his/her own--am not the wealthiest man on this planet but am definitely the luckiest of every man / woman have ever met
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" the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. "--edmund burke
I didn't get a ticket and there fore I didn't become rich.
No geek massive Disney world trip in our immediate future.
I will simply have to continue enjoying the life I already live.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.