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Wow that seems low, US median household income is $83k, even with taxes and conversion that seems like a significant gap and I always thought US and UK had similar price levels. Are taxes just that much higher? Or are households smaller ? Or are incomes in the US just that much better?
Dollar is incredibly strong, because it is a global reserve currency. If you look at purchasing power, the difference in incomes between UK and USA would be much lower.
Are you accounting for everything that's included in UK taxation such as health care and state pension?
We're talking about median, and the median person in the US gets employer provided healthcare and usually some form of employer pension/401k contribution plus social security, so I don't think those would be much different cost wise for a median US vs UK resident. I'm sure Britain uses there taxes better than us and has better benefits, especially for the poor, but I don't think that fully accounts for the gap.
So they don't pay a penny towards those costs? For the median? As thats a lot of people.
As its entirely wrapped in the tax already accounted for in that net income with the UK tax payer.
I wasn't expecting it to be the whole difference but I do know those that have to pay in the US pay a significant chunk of change.
The wealth of the USA compared to other devoloped countries has shot away over the past 10-15 years, it's not entirely clear why.