Bro you think I am calling them dope? No I am saying those motherfukkers are getting a better lifestyle than the typical American because they don’t got inflation and a leader dead set on firing his middle class employers. They also have way more opportunity to go from a peasant to middle class than America’s typical working poor citizen has to become middle class.
Bro there is another thread on here about a report that came out that about 25% of Americans basically living in poverty. Donald Trump is gutting the social safety net, and is shutting down federal agencies left and right. .
Now let’s talk about China’s Middle Class
How will a growing Chinese middle class impact global politics, when democracy is no longer the only way to achieve a stable middle-class lifestyle?
www.brookings.edu
By 2027, it’s estimate that 1.2 billion Chinese will be in the middle class, making up one quarter of the world total. Meanwhile America’s actual middle class (aka people who own assets that can be made into money or borrowed against like a house) is shrinking.
The fukked up shyt is we dont have to live this way, but like I said there is an overt attempt to transfer wealth from the middle class to the wealthiest Americans, just like what happened the first time Trump became president. Both time he ran the country the majority of the countries wealth was funneled to the wealthiest and he is doing it again.
So yeah them Chinese peasants are doing way better than a homeless American or even an American working over 50+ hours a week who can’t keep up with his bills.
The average Chinese earns less than 5,000 dollars a year. You are stretching the term “middle class”
The median monthly disposable income in China is CNY 2,7952 (approximately $3,855),
according to Remote People. This means that half of the population earns less than this amount, while the other half earns more. The median per capita disposable income, which provides insight into income distribution, was RMB 34,707 (US$4,817) in 2024,
according to China Briefing. However, this figure is about 84% of the average, indicating that income is skewed towards higher earners
In 2022, the average annual salary of employees in urban non-private positions reached RMB 114,029 (approx. US$15,946), a nominal increase of 3.7 percent year-on-year and a real increase of 1.7 percent year-on-year.
Urban non-private companies in the Chinese government’s nomenclaturerefers to all non-private legal entities in urban areas and includes state-owned enterprises (SOEs), collectively owned enterprises, joint ventures, joint-stock companies, foreign-invested economies (FIEs), and Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan-invested companies.
Salaries in the non-private sector are considerably higher than in the private sector. On average, a non-private sector employee made almost twice the amount of an employee in the private sector, whose annual average salary in 2022 was RMB 65,237 (approx. US$9,123).
Salaries in both the private and non-private sectors have more than doubled over the last decade. However, the growth of average salaries in the non-private sector has been slightly faster than in the private sector, with the non-private sector recording a CAGR of 8.28 percent from 2013 to 2022, compared to 7.15 percent in the private sector.
China going to win the next couple decades. Correctly decided to sit back and watch as the US eats itself
US problems are self inflicted by governance. Chinas problems are systematic and unavoidable
Good luck running a country where you have more elderly than workers