Unrestrained spending since the mid 1980s in American households has damaged the family finances, Queens College sociologist Joseph Nathan Cohen explained
![Sociologist Explains Why the American Middle Class Still Struggles Financially Sociologist Explains Why the American Middle Class Still Struggles Financially](https://images.medindia.net/health-images/1200_1000/family-healthy-food.jpg)
- Household spending on goods that fulfill pleasure, self-esteem, or social status needs have generally been falling, including personal care items, apparel, home furnishings, and automobiles.
- However, consumption spending has risen most in four product categories that shape families' health, safety, and economic viability: health care, education, housing, and commuting costs.
- Prices in these four product markets have greatly outpaced both wages and prices in general.
- Americans may be systematically pressed to overspend on housing because access to better schools, public services, and transportation infrastructure varies considerably across communities, and better-heeled communities often restrict affordable housing developments. Americans may face a relatively high well-being penalty for living in more modestly-priced homes.
- Compared to other highly-developed countries, the U.S. does considerably less to control the personal financial burden borne by households to ensure access to these products and services essential to well-being. Advertisement
- Soaring tuition and health care costs are not the principal drivers of household financial distress, but they constitute the fastest-growing problem.
- Cohen argues that our penchant to blame household spending problems on wastefulness or frivolities obscures the fact that Americans increasingly face a lose-lose dilemma in which they must choose between sustainable finances and access to quality schools, child care, medical care, public safety, and employment opportunities. Advertisement
Source-Eurekalert